03.jpg
02.jpg
01.jpg
06.jpg
04.jpg
05.jpg
01.jpg
02.jpg
03.jpg
50.jpg
46.jpg
47.jpg
49.jpg
48.jpg
44.jpg
45.jpg
42.jpg
43.jpg

View the entire photo archive of Emily Blunt Web photo gallery with over 9000 photos & still growing.

View More?Become One?


“The Five-Year Engagement ”
Year: 2012
Director: Nicholas Stoller
Status: Post-production
Emily as Violet Barnes
More: Information | Official | Photo Gallery


“Looper”
Year: 2012
Director: Rian Johnson
Status: Post-production
Emily as Sara
More: Information | Official | Photo Gallery


“Arthur Newman, Golf Pro”
Year: 2012
Director: Dante Ariola
Status: Post-production
Emily as Mike
More: Information | Official | Photo Gallery









I’ve finally get the new layout up at emilyblunt.net Forum. Emily fans can now registration to the forum and roll in and post! This forum is currently still searching for moderators to maintain the board. Enjoy and have fun posting!


As by keeping this site up and running, emilyblunt.net needs you, the visitors help to donate some funds to this site. I need to buy several resources which can costs me loads of bucks. Your help would be kindly appreciated.


Currently Online Viewing: 16
Most Ever Online: 567 @ 23 August, 2009 at 02:24
Maintained by: Angelic & Grace
Opened since: August 14, 2008

Emily Blunt Web is just a non-profit making, unofficial fansite. I is in no way affiliated with Emily Blunt nor her relative and managment. Please do not send any fanmail and hatemail to me. All graphics are made by me unless stated, please do not reprint, copy or steal without permission given.

Posted in 'Sunshine Cleaning'Reviews
This post was written by Angelic

Despite its perky title, ‘Sunshine Cleaning’ is much darker than its producers’ previous film, ‘Little Miss Sunshine,’ as it ventures simply and realistically into suicide, adultery and loss. The film will be introduced to Turkish audiences at the 28th International Film Festival next month

It has become a genre all its own: the dysfunctional-family indie comedy, a staple of film festivals and art-house theaters alike.

Done wrong, and these movies can seem too self-consciously quirky (and by now, “quirky” feels like a word that was created especially to describe this kind of film). Done right, and you’ve got a “Little Miss Sunshine” or a “Juno” on your hands. “Sunshine Cleaning” falls into the latter category G and its producers happen to have been behind “Little Miss Sunshine” as well. Both films share an Albuquerque, New Mexico, setting and Alan Arkin as a lovably outspoken father and grandfather. But really, that’s where the similarities end; despite its perky title, “Sunshine Cleaning” is much darker as it ventures simply and realistically into suicide, adultery and loss.

Amy Adams and Emily Blunt have great chemistry as Rose and Norah Lorkowski, underachieving sisters who stumble into the crime-scene cleanup business. Once a cheerleader at the height of her high-school popularity, thirtysomething Rose now finds herself a single mom working as a maid, which sometimes requires her to clean her former classmates’ McMansions. Younger sister Norah is even more of a screw-up, partying hard, getting fired from waitressing jobs and still living at home with dad (Arkin).

Money for her son

All that changes G somewhat G when Rose’s married lover (Steve Zahn), a cop, suggests that she step into the lucrative world of mopping up messy crime scenes. Rose is immediately intrigued by the prospect: She needs the extra money to put her highly imaginative but misunderstood son, Oscar, in a private school. (Young Jason Spevack’s performance is blissfully free of precociousness.)

Rose recruits her unemployed sister, but Norah isn’t quite so enthusiastic about washing blood from murder scenes and airing out trailers that reek of decomposing corpses G that is, until she finds an unexpected connection with the daughter of one of these victims, played by Mary Lynn Rajskub of “24″ in a subplot that feels underdeveloped.

But the overall lack of sentimentality in first-timer Megan Holley’s script and straightforward direction from Christine Jeffs keep the film from becoming too predictably feel-good; at the same time, the strong performances help elevate the film among similar fare. Adams and Blunt have a subtle and believable sibling dynamic; while Adams has been best known for engaging, energetic roles in films like “Enchanted” and “Doubt,” here she allows the weightier side of her talent to emerge, which makes her seem like a grown-up for the first time. The always-alluring Blunt, meanwhile, continues to show her versatility.

Clifton Collins Jr. is lovely in just a few scenes as the gentle soul who runs a cleaning-supply store (and thankfully, “Sunshine Cleaning” doesn’t force his presence as a potential love interest for Rose). And Arkin is a cantankerous hoot in a role similar to the one the earned him a supporting-actor Academy Award for “Little Miss Sunshine”: a widower peddling various products from the trunk of his junker car and doling out half-baked advice to his grandson.

Turns out the business of death forces them all to figure out what really matters in life.

Source: Hurriyet

Related Posts


Posted on 19 March, 2009 1 Commented From This Post


This entry was posted on Thursday, March 19th, 2009 at 12:05 am and is filed under 'Sunshine Cleaning', Reviews. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One Response to “‘Sunshine Cleaning’ Review”

João Wrote:

Thanks!

Leave a Reply