The Florida Project review – thrillingly vibrant (2024)

The title of this wonderfully humanist film from Tangerine director Sean Baker offers an ironic twist on the name under which Walt Disney first developed his “community of tomorrow” plans for the so-called Sunshine State. For Disney the “Florida project” was the utopian dream that blossomed into the money-spinning Walt Disney World. By contrast, the run-down motels of Baker’s summer-break drama are more like “projects” in the US welfare-housing sense – home to low-income families living a hand-to-mouth existence, just beyond the boundaries of the upmarket tourist attractions.

Located in Kissimmee, which lies east of Eden on Route 192, these gaudily hued establishments have names like the Magic Castle and Futureland, evoking a dream of fun, fantasy and adventure that is jarringly at odds with harsh economic realities. Purple and yellow paint jobs can’t disguise the fact that many of the residents are in the red, struggling to pay rent, intermittently ousted from their rooms to avoid possible claims of residency. Yet the fairytale is still very much alive for the kids at the centre of this thrillingly vibrant film, which Baker tellingly calls “a modern-day Our Gang” – a reference to Hal Roach’s classic Depression-era kids’ comedies. As Kool and the Gang’s anthemic song Celebration reminds us at the outset, there are good times amid these hard times.

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Six-year-old Moonee (Brooklynn Kimberly Prince) lives in the Magic Castle with her mother, Halley (Bria Vinaite), a dancer and chancer who makes ends meet any way she can – hawking wholesale perfume to rich resort customers, stealing theme park-entry passes from wide-eyed tourists, and more. Meanwhile Moonee and her trusty sidekick Scooty (Christopher Rivera) take time out from spit-bombing parked cars to befriend new kid on the block Jancey (Valeria Cotto). Together, they show Jancey around their wonderland home, taking us on a guided tour of the motel’s corridors, lifts and rooms (“the man who lives in here gets arrested a lot”), scamming ice-cream from the local Twistee Treat parlour (“The doctor says we have asthma and we gotta eat ice-cream right away!”), and occasionally shutting off the motel’s power supply for rascally giggles.

For motel manager Bobby (Willem Dafoe) these young tearaways are a headache, but a streak of protective paternalism shines through his world-weary facade, ensuring that he’s always got their backs. Though Halley sometimes seems like a child herself (“This is so much better than TV!” she squeals when a nearby building catches fire), there’s no doubting her love for her daughter, to whom she is utterly devoted. As for Moonee, she’s watched and learned from her mum’s streetwise sass, talking and acting more like a 20-year-old than an under-10, and insisting: “I can always tell when adults are about to cry.” All of which makes it all the more shocking when her own game-face briefly breaks into tears, and we are reminded just how young she really is.

Tangerine, Baker’s micro-budget break-out hit about a transgender sex worker, was shot exclusively on iPhone. Here, he goes a more choreographed visual style here, conjuring a child’s-eye sense of wonder as we glide from DayGlo buildings to verdant fields that unexpectedly interrupt the alien concrete landscape. Shooting on both digital and 35mm, cinematographer Alexis Zabe (whose CV ranges from Carlos Reygadas’s Silent Light to pop videos for Die Antwoord) captures these weird widescreen vistas beneath blue skies and candy-land sunsets, finding heartstopping beauty in the image of a tree, which Moonee significantly loves because “it’s tipped over and it’s still growing”.

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A scene in which the kids venture into derelict buildings (yellow, green and pink) reminded me of Barry Jenkins’s Moonlight, another Florida-set film that found kaleidoscopic poetry amid streets blighted by poverty. There’s a touch of Lynne Ramsay’s Ratcatcher or Clio Barnard’s The Selfish Giant in the way Baker and co-writer/producer Chris Bergoch embrace Moonee’s defiant perspective, making us feel her joy and pain with all the raw urgency of youth. Fans of Andrea Arnold’s American Honey, too, will notice a kindred spirit in the portrayal of Halley, played with remarkable candour by first-timer Bria Vinaite, whom Baker discovered on Instagram. Elsewhere, open auditions and street casting have generated an authentic ensemble into whose midst more seasoned performers such as Dafoe and Caleb Landry Jones slip seamlessly.

It all adds up to another superbly sympathetic portrait of marginalised experience from a film-maker whose great triumph is that he never feels like a tourist. This is Moonee’s world, and for a couple of hours at least, we are privileged to live in it.

The Florida Project review – thrillingly vibrant (2024)

FAQs

Did Bobby call DCF on Halley? ›

Bobby Called DCF About Moonee

Audiences are led to believe that it was Ashley, the neighbor Halley beats up towards the end. However, the most likely culprit is Bobby.

Did Moonee actually go to Disney? ›

Filming took place at various locations in Osceola County, Florida, including at the real Magic Castle Inn & Suites, which is six miles from Disney World. And yes, whether or not Moonee actually made it to Disney, a skeleton cast and crew did: Those final scenes were (secretly) filmed at the park.

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.”

How realistic is the Florida project? ›

Although this movie is fictional, it uses real families living in the motels as extra characters. His Page 4 film criticized America's welfare program and the neoliberal iteration of public housing and highlighted the realities of families in crisis.

Why did Halley beat up Ashley? ›

Out of desperation, Halley approaches Ashley to apologize and ask for money. Ashley then criticizes Halley's job as a sex worker; enraged, Halley grabs Ashley and viciously beats her in front of Scooty.

Why did Halley throw up in 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.

Why did The Florida Project end that way? ›

The ending of The Florida Project emphasizes Moonee's sense of wonder and imagination, which is key to the movie's core message. Moonee's mother, Halley, likely lost custody of her after the ending, highlighting the struggles of single mothers in poverty.

What do the helicopters mean in The Florida Project? ›

The more “obvious” reason is to demonstrate how mundane life is around the Magic Castle. How the helicopter tours don't care that they're disturbing the residents of the hotel by constantly giving more fortunate people an expensive sight seeing ride. A contrast between wealth and poverty.

Why did they go to Disneyland at the end of The Florida Project? ›

The ending, where the children run away to Disney World, reflects the theme of finding happiness and agency in difficult circ*mstances.

Is The motel in 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.

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.

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.

Why are there so many helicopters 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.

Where is the Purple hotel from The Florida Project? ›

The Florida Project was filmed in the real Magic Castle Inn and Suites, which is located six miles away from Walt Disney World on US Highway 192 in Kissimmee.

Why do they move rooms in The Florida Project? ›

Mooney, who is brilliantly portrayed by Prince, idles away the time with her friends Scooty (Christopher Rivera) and Jancey (Valeria Cotto). The adults have to suffer the ignominies of a life without wealth or success. They are forced to check out for one day each month and shift rooms so as to not establish residency.

Why did Moonee get taken away? ›

Halley cleans up the motel room. But when the DCF agents arrive, this time with the police, the state of the room doesn't matter. They've obtained a copy of Halley's online ad soliciting herself for sex, which is enough evidence to take Moonee away from her mother while an investigation is underway.

What did Bobby do in The Florida Project? ›

The entire movie Bobby protected those children. Even with all the work he had to do around the motel, he was practically the only adult who kept an eye on them. He guarded them from that pedophile, shielded them from the crazy sunbathing hag, and tried to protect them from themselves when they got out of hand.

Was Halley a good mom in The Florida Project? ›

For those that have seen the film, whether it was one time or for the thousandth, no one of us can deny that Halley is, in plenty of regards, a bad mother, but she very much loves her daughter.

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