Chicago Sun-Times

OUR PLACE IN THE SUN

Children make the best of their grim lives in Orlando suburbs in ‘ The Florida Project’

- RICHARD ROEPER,

For most of “The Florida Project,” I found myself rooting for unseen authoritie­s.

The police. The Florida Department of Children and Families. Maybe a church leader.

Someone to swoop in and rescue a little girl from her monstrousl­y unfit mother and to provide much- needed psychologi­cal help for this child, who already has picked up some alarmingly anti- social tendencies ( and that might be understati­ng it) from her mom.

With “The Florida Project,” the gifted writerdire­ctor Sean Baker delivers a sun- dappled but decidedly dark and severely fractured (and occasional­ly classcon descending) fairy tale, set so close to Disney World you can see the fireworks popping off in the distance at night — but a galaxy away for the impoverish­ed chil- dren who live in the garishly painted, barely inhabitabl­e, rundown motels of certain Orlando suburbs.

Often shot from the point of view of the young children who roam the properties and nearby streets with either no adult supervisio­n, or “supervisio­n” so incompeten­t they might be better off on their own, “The Florida Project” does a masterful job of exploring a world rarely explored in movies: the almost completely dream- free lives of poverty- class millennial­s ( many of them parents) who barely get by on part- time, hourly wage jobs and/ or misdemeano­r- level moneymakin­g schemes.

They work as maids in the nicer hotels, or patrol the parking lots of those hotels, trying to resell cheap perfume to guilty rich folks at a steep markup. They scrap and scrape to make enough for their $ 35 a night “rent” payment. ( At the end of each month, they have to put their things in storage, move out of their rooms and stay at a nearby motel for a night, because they’re not allowed to establish permanent residency in any of these places.)

They live with their kids in tiny motel rooms, with the TV or music almost always blaring, and junk food strewn about. If they spend any time trying to teach their children to learn, we don’t see it in this movie. ( Hence my earlier comment about class condescens­ion.)

In a remarkable performanc­e free of self- conscious, child- actor mannerisms, Brooklynn Prince plays Moonee, a girl of about 6 who is bright and filled with energy and sometimes adorable and cheerful — but also manipulati­ve and dishonest and a little mean- spirited and temperamen­tal.

Moonee and her little running mates Scooty ( Christophe­r Rivera) and Jancey ( Valeria Cotto) get themselves into all sorts of trouble, ranging from the disturbing but relatively harmless to the disturbing and potentiall­y quite harmful.

Moonee is the leader of the bunch, giving the lay of the land to new arrival Jancey. She says not to use the elevator because it always smells of urine. She’s the tour guide to food stands where if they hang around long enough, the proprietor­s will give them free treats just so they’ll go away. She’s a resourcefu­l kid and even when she’s getting into trouble, she breaks your heart because even though she’s awfully cynical for someone her age, she’s not sophistica­ted enough to realize every street in her neighborho­od might as well be a dead end.

Bria Vinaite is so good as Halley, Moonee’s nightmare of a mother, we want to yell at the screen for her to get her stuff together. Halley loves Moonee, but she can’t take care of herself, let alone a child. She can’t hold a job, she has a horrible temper, she’s had multiple run- ins with the law — and when there’s no money left, she advertises herself online and welcomes a steady parade of men into the tiny motel room, parking Moonee in the bathroom and turning up the radio so Moonee can’t hear what’s happening on the other side of the door.

In one of the finest performanc­es of a long and varied career, Willem Dafoe is Bobby, the manager of the motel.

Talk about a thankless job. Not a day goes by — heck, not an hour goes by — without some problem, whether it’s a guest behind on her rent slamming the door in his face, or busted washing machines in the laundry room, or a creepy adult stranger talking to kids in the rusted- out playground, or a 70ish female guest insisting on going topless at the swimming pool.

Bobby’s kind of a hapless character — apologetic to a fault, intimidate­d by some of the guests — but he’s pretty damn heroic in his own way, in this small and godforsake­n corner of the world. Even as the kids are driving him nuts and screaming things like, “You’re not my father!,” you get the impression they realize on some level he’s the closest thing to a positive adult role model in their lives.

As “The Florida Project” grows bleaker, writerdire­ctor Baker nimbly shifts the tone of the film, with the skies literally growing darker, and certain characters meeting the consequenc­es of their actions. It’s film that’ll make you wince at times, and you’ll most likely not want to see twice, but seeing it once is an experience you’ll not soon forget.

 ??  ?? Bria Vinaite ( from left), Valeria Cotto and Brooklynn Prince play residents of a rundown motel .
| A24 PHOTOS
Bria Vinaite ( from left), Valeria Cotto and Brooklynn Prince play residents of a rundown motel . | A24 PHOTOS
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 ??  ?? Motel manager Bobby ( Willem Dafoe) is the closest thing Moonee ( Brooklynn Prince) has to a positive role model in “The Florida Project.”
Motel manager Bobby ( Willem Dafoe) is the closest thing Moonee ( Brooklynn Prince) has to a positive role model in “The Florida Project.”

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