Mark Schroeder’s Movie Reviews

The Florida Project

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Grade: A

Once in a blue moon, a movie comes along that exists in a realm of its own. It is uniquely made, but plays so satisfyingly that it makes conventional “normal” movies look generic and inferior in comparison. Birdman had that effect on me three years ago, and this year, I feel the same way about The Florida Project. Last night, I’d initially planned on streaming only the first half hour, and working my way through it in increments. I devoured the whole thing in one sitting. There is no score except for the last scene, it’s minimal on plot, but I could not stop watching it and I likely would have sat through another hour.

Director Sean Baker has given The Florida Project an almost documentary type feel. This is a movie that is more about situations than stories. It takes us into the world of cheap motels in Orlando, on the outskirts of Disney. You’d only find yourself there if everything else was booked, you made a mistake, or you’re not well off and need to establish residency there. There is a funny scene where a honeymooning couple, thinking they are staying at the Magic Kingdom, receives a rude awakening when they are instead brought to the Magic Castle, where most of the film is set. The central characters are Halley, a single mother with her 6 year old daughter Moonee. We follow Moonee for much of the movie, as she and her friends from the Magic Castle and the place next door get into mischief and annoy the grownups, while Halley smokes and watches TV in the room, while occasionally taking in a male visitor in exchange for money or whatever she can steal to resell – Magic Bracelets, in one unwitting man’s case. The patient but firm, hardworking, honest, tolerant manager Bobby is played to perfection by Willem Dafoe, who is nominated for an Oscar for this performance. He is the reliable thread that holds these sometimes disjointed episodes together. Brooklynn Prince is awesome as Moonee, and making her film debut as Halley is 24-year-old Bria Vinaite, who the director discovered on Instagram. This child actress and new actress hold their own spectacularly with Dafoe, a seasoned pro who is always great.

If you are expecting a polished, maudlin, saccharine, syrupy-sweet drama about poor people, The Florida Project would not be it. Director Sean Baker sidesteps all the potential cliches, and shows us you don’t need the usual bells, whistles, or Hollywood gloss. I can’t wait to see what his career will bring us in the future. What a fascinating, hypnotic, magical cinematic experience this is – set just outside the most magical place on earth.

Grade: A

20 responses to “The Florida Project”

  1. […] ordinary “normal” movies look inferior in comparison. I have previously said that about The Florida Project and Birdman. I can’t wait to find out what the next one will […]

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  2. […] other than a typical exercise in style. I was endlessly fascinated and captivated by movies like The Florida Project and Birdman, which were so set apart and different, and bursting with life in their unique worlds, […]

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  3. […] itself to me, but I somehow have a feeling that what you see here is all you get. Something like The Florida Project definitely went places. I love where this could have gone, but something is consistently missing. I […]

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  4. […] Trees and Power Lines and Of An Age, sprinkle a bit of the crude, meandering documentary feel of The Florida Project – and you have Scrapper. Writer/director Charlotte Regan, in her feature film debut, gives us […]

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  5. […] particularly interesting projects these days. He got his third Oscar nomination two years ago for The Florida Project, which will go down as one of my favorite films of the decade – and got a Best Actor nod this […]

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  6. […] realize that I have seen all 4. He was my choice to win last year for my favorite movie of 2017/18, The Florida Project. Though this will probably not be his year, he should win an Oscar one day. He is mesmerizing as […]

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  7. […] be 1950 or 2023. We don’t know (yet). 12-year-old Helena (Brooklynn Prince from Cocaine Bear and The Florida Project) absolutely adores her dad (Ben Mendelsohn). She would rather spend the day hunting with him than […]

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  8. […] the Best Picture list instead of The Greatest Showman, Coco, or my favorite movie of the last year, The Florida Project. My other favorite line: I laughed very hard when Oldman said “I’m coming out in a state of […]

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  9. […] it comes to the style of the movie, I can best compare it to The Florida Project. That was set in what you might call the darkness on the edge of town – the lowly […]

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  10. […] two of my favorite films of the last 10 years. It has the raw reality-based documentary feel of The Florida Project mixed with the quiet down-home simplicity of […]

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  11. […] me. To name a few, it happened with American Beauty, Silver Linings Playbook, Birdman, Whiplash, The Florida Project, Can You Ever Forgive Me?, Toy Story 4, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Knives Out, and now I add […]

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  12. […] movie is several days in the life of this man. Aside from my beloved The Florida Project, Perfect Days made me think of Enys Men – a film from last year that also depicted lots of […]

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  13. […] normal ones look ordinary and inferior in comparison. I have previously felt this way with The Florida Project, and Birdman before that. One of my favorite songs from the early millennium gets a reference, in a […]

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  14. […] We Grown Now to a Terrence Malik movie, an early Spielberg coming-of-age film, and like my beloved The Florida Project, it’s one of those movies that doesn’t devote every last minute to advancing a plot. It’s not […]

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  15. […] normal ones seem ordinary and inferior in comparison. I’ve previously said that about Tár, The Florida Project, and Birdman. I can add I Saw the TV Glow to that list. The closest thing I can compare it to is […]

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  16. […] Linklater would be proud of it. It immediately made me think of Easy Rider, as well as my beloved The Florida Project and Perfect Days. It’s made with no chemicals or preservatives – and ultimately turns out […]

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  17. […] officially beginning to see diminishing returns after the likes of the brilliant Perfect Days and The Florida Project. I even gave the recent Gasoline Rainbow a benefit-of-the-doubt pass. Yes, readers – Janet […]

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  18. […] married. This is a good time to mention that Anora is directed by Sean Baker, who did my beloved The Florida Project. This is definitely from the director of The Florida Project. The filmmaking style is raw, crude, […]

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  19. […] – Sure to be a top Oscar contender. From the director of my beloved The Florida Project. Mikey Madison gives one of the best performances of the […]

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  20. […] on YouTube depicting what English sounds like to people who don’t speak it. Hot Milk must be how The Florida Project played for the people who hated The Florida […]

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