The Florida Project review – a wondrous child's-eye view of life on the margins (2024)

The Florida Project is a song of innocence and of experience: mainly the former. It is a glorious film in which warmth and compassion win out over miserabilism or irony, painted in bright blocks of sunlit colour like a child’s storybook and often happening in those electrically charged magic-hour urban sunsets that the director Sean Baker also gave us in his zero-budget breakthrough Tangerine.

This also has the best child acting I have seen for years; in its humour and its unforced and almost miraculous naturalism it reminded me of British examples like Ken Loach’s Kes or Bryan Forbes’s Whistle Down the Wind. Steven Spielberg once said: “If you over-rehearse kids, you risk a bad case of the cutes.” But these kids don’t look cute or over-rehearsed or rehearsed at all; they look as if everything they do and every word that comes out of their mouths is unscripted and real. Yet what they do also has the intelligence and artistry of acting. In his own grownup role, Willem Dafoe gives a performance of quiet excellence and integrity.

The drama is set in a budget motel in Kissimmee, Florida, just off the grimly named Seven Dwarfs Lane in the shadow of Walt Disney World: one of many long-stay welfare places for transients and mortgage defaulters. These places are very much, in Disneyspeak, “off property”. They are not part of the magic kingdom, which is only glimpsed at the horizon and subliminally in things like a sign showing a large circle with two smaller circles above – Mickey Mouse reduced to a corporate essence. Only at the very end of the film do we enter the Disney World precincts, a sequence apparently shot in secret.

But, for the little kids who live there, this rundown place does look weirdly like paradise, a place where one summer they enjoy pure, magical freedom, running around its walkways and stairwells and far afield into Florida’s unofficial countryside. These kids do something that is a distant memory for most of us: they roam (a word I hadn’t even thought of for years before seeing this film) just the way children were supposed to in some former age. They wander from dawn to dusk and have fun.

Moonee (Brooklynn Prince) is a fearless six-year-old girl whose mother Halley (Bria Vinaite) has failed to get work waitressing or lapdancing and is now trying to sell knock-off perfume to people coming in and out of golf resorts. Soon Halley may have to resort to a more obviously lucrative evening business from her motel room. As for Moonee, she can just hang out endlessly with loads of other kids like her friend Scooty (Christopher Rivera), whose own mom lets them have leftover food from the diner where she works.

The Florida Project review – a wondrous child's-eye view of life on the margins (1)

Dafoe plays Bobby, the hotel manager, who is perennially irritated with late-paying, trash-talking Halley but looks out for her and is a veritable catcher in the rye for Moonee and all the other little kids. Bobby has a fraught relationship with his own adult son Jack (Caleb Landry Jones) who he calls over to help with jobs. Bobby takes a pride in his hotel, making sure it is properly painted: a cheesy but somehow endearing purple, a bold contrast to the vivid orange of nearby Orange World. Unlike most motel swimming pools in this kind of story, the one here is properly filled, functional and in fact rather inviting.

There is an adult narrative thread running through The Florida Project, a narrative of disillusion and suppressed fear; but it comes encased in the children’s heedless, directionless world of fun. An exasperated neighbour asks Moonee what exactly she’s playing and she replies: “We’re just playing.” It’s an open-ended, amorphous form of hanging out. It is a wonderful time for them, and Baker brilliantly persuades you that Moonee is the one in the real Eden, not the dull tourists shuffling around in Disney World. But then they break into some abandoned houses, and things go wrong for the children, and then the adults.

As director, editor and co-writer (with Chris Bergoch), Baker creates a story that is utterly absorbing and moves with its own easy, ambient swing: it is superbly shot by cinematographer Alexis Zabe, a longtime collaborator of Carlos Reygadas. Baker has the gift of seeing things from a child’s view. There is a kind of genius in that.

The Florida Project review – a wondrous child's-eye view of life on the margins (2024)

FAQs

How much of The Florida Project was scripted? ›

Much of the script was improvised, and many of the actors were performing onscreen for the first time. DID YOU KNOW? According to Sean Baker, the production was almost shut down midway through principal photography because his crew – unfamiliar with his directing style – believed he was “rogue and crazy.”

What is the message of The Florida Project? ›

What is the meaning of The Florida Project? The Florida Project is about growing up in the shadow of fantasy: the struggle to survive in real life while finding sheer and boundless wonder in the unreal.

Did they actually go to Disney World in The Florida Project? ›

Filming. The Florida Project was filmed in the summer of 2016 on location in Osceola County, Florida, including at the real Magic Castle Inn & Suites located on U.S. Highway 192 in Kissimmee, which is nearly six miles from Walt Disney World.

Did Bobby call DCF on Halley? ›

When DCF appears at the Magic Castle motel in The Florida Project's ending, it's never explicitly stated who made the final call. Audiences are led to believe that it was Ashley, the neighbor Halley beats up towards the end. However, the most likely culprit is Bobby.

Were the kids in The Florida Project acting? ›

[Brooklynn Prince] is just so incredible and she worked very closely with Sam [acting coach Samantha Quan], but to tell you the truth with her in particular she is a born thespian. I mean she is really acting. There is a true performance there, a true character that she found. She is wise beyond her years.

Did the kids in The Florida Project have a script? ›

DaFoe's sensitive portrayal is exceptional. The rest of the cast were first time actors Baker wanted to use to make it more documentary like, and so much of the script was improvised. And Baker says he was always afraid the production would be shut down and wouldn't be able to finish this film.

How accurate is The Florida Project? ›

The Florida Project, a 2017 Sean Baker cinematography project, follows a young mother and her six-year-old daughter Moonee through their lives. They reside in a motel across the street from Disney World, Florida. Although this movie is fictional, it uses real families living in the motels as extra characters.

Why did Halley beat up Ashley? ›

Ashley accuses Halley of being a whor*—showing her a picture of her own online ad—and Halley responds by violently beating up Ashley in front of Scooty. The next day, the Florida Department of Children and Families (DCF), show up at Halley's door. Clearly, Ashley called them.

Would Disney ever pull out of Florida? ›

It would actually be extremely difficult, experts say. Impossibly so. “There isn't enough tea in China or gold in the ground to get Disney to leave Florida,” said Dennis Speigel, president of the consulting firm International Theme Park Services. He said Disney created a global destination for leisure travel.

What do the helicopters mean in The Florida Project? ›

Helicopters flying overhead were written into the script because production didn't have enough budget to stop the helicopters from flying. Christopher Rivera was an 8-year-old living with his mother at the Paradise Inn in Kissimmee, Florida, when crew members spotted him.

Why do they move rooms in The Florida Project? ›

Bobby skirts the law by having his extended-stay guests move out for one night a month so that they don't establish residency; but while he tries not to question how they get the money to pay their rent, he also keeps a close eye on the comings and goings in every room, to make sure that no one's dealing drugs or ...

Why was Halley throwing up The Florida Project? ›

After her former friend Ashley warns Halley that everyone in the motel knows how she is earning rent money, Halley explodes and savagely beats her. This act of revenge is anything but sweet, as Halley has to vomit after her violent outburst.

How old is Haley in Florida Project? ›

Moonee's 20-something mother, Halley, is played by newcomer Bria Vinaite (who director Sean Baker discovered on Instagram) and Willem Dafoe plays the harried motel manager.

What is the foreshadowing in The Florida Project? ›

In one brilliantly foreshadowed scene, motel manager Bobby (Willem Dafoe) escorts a blatant paedophile away from the kids before threatening him never to come back; it's right on the fence of hilarity and horror; the former aided by the man's striking resemblance to Herbert The Pervert from Family Guy.

How much of The Florida Project is improvised? ›

For example, the scene with the cranes was almost entirely improvised - both in front of and behind the camera. In addition, the scenes showing Halley and Moonee trying to sell perfume were not scripted and featured real people.

Is the hotel from The Florida Project real? ›

The real-life location of this scene is Paradise Inn, situated at 4501 W Irlo Bronson Memorial Highway, Kissimmee. This location was transformed into the fictional Future Land motel for the movie.

Are there any inappropriate scenes in The Florida Project? ›

There are occasional references to "dancing for tips" and "getting laid" by adults around children. After a man threatens to evict her from the motel, a woman grudgingly pulls her menstrual pad out from her shorts and slaps it onto the man's office window. Has a humorous if crude context.

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