The Florida Project Review - IGN (2024)

The Florida Project

A small film that feels endlessly big.

The more I think about The Florida Project, the more its images begin to stand out for me. Take for instance, one of its more poetic sequences, when a little girl and her two best friends walk aimlessly through a batch of abandoned, pastel-colored condos. The sweltering Florida heat wears them down, but never before they’re done playing. All that divides them from Disney World, the supposed “Happiest Place On Earth,” is a ring of swamp land.Much like writer and director Sean Baker’s previous film, Tangerine, which got notice for being shot entirely on an iPhone, The Florida Project is about the people living in the in-between. Sitting continuously on the brink of someplace much better than they’re in right now, but also one much worse. It’s about a group of people, barely making ends meet, living in a beat-up purple motel called The Magic Castle, where sometimes Disney tourists accidentally make reservations. To most adults, the place looks and feels like one that you’d try to avoid at all costs, but to the kids living there - it’s no different or less magical than anywhere else in the world.

The greatest success of The Florida Project is how well Baker and his co-writer, Chris Bergoch, manage to firmly plant you in the perspective of its young characters, led by Brooklynn Prince’s fierce and rebellious Moonee. Introduced while playing under one of her hotel home’s many staircases, Moonee spends all her summer days playing with her best friend, Scooty (Christopher Rivera), and eventually, another addition to their duo in Valeria Cotto’s Jancey, a girl around the same age as them living in another neighboring hotel.

Moonee and her posse spend a majority of their days wandering around Florida, through some of the swamp lands, the many parking lots, and finishing their days by sharing an ice cream cone between the three of them. Occasionally, though, they bring their troubles back home to The Magic Castle, where Willem Dafoe’s Bobby manages the building like a parent trying to keep their sick child alive. His relationships with the tenants, and specifically kids like Moonee and Scooty, is caring and protective. He tries his best to keep them in line, while always focused on making sure he’s able to keep the Castle open.

In an uncharacteristically soft turn, Dafoe gives one of the best performances of his entire career here. He brings Bobby to life as a man with a big heart, and who chooses to show it through quiet gestures of goodwill. Dafoe is deserving of all the praise he’s received for The Florida Project up until this point, and will likely, stay in most viewers’ minds for weeks after they venture to the theatre to see it.

As he also did with Tangerine, Baker has chosen to populate The Florida Project with an ensemble of mostly unknown actors, all of whom give such natural and compelling performances that it’s easy to forget they’re playing characters at all. Brooklynn Prince shines the most as Moonee, whose joy and vibrancy is infectious to even the most oblivious and selfish of those around her. There are several times, especially in the second half of the film, where Baker chooses to have just Prince’s face take up the entire screen - for what seem like minutes at a time - and it’s not rare for those moments to tug at your heartstrings in often sudden and unexpected ways.

Thanks to its plot and characters - most of whom are prone to making increasingly bad decisions as time goes on - The Florida Project will not be an easy movie for most people to fall in love with. Its subject matter is dark and intense in a very real way, no matter how much the film’s childlike perspective manages to dull some of its grimier moments. But for those ready to give themselves over to this story and Baker’s style, it offers rewards greater than what most films so far this year have.

Verdict

With The Florida Project, Sean Baker has managed to take his already established keen visual eye and combine it with an intelligent way of writing human characters, to create his most profound and moving film to date. It may not be an easy piece of work to digest at times, but the emotions it’s able to conjure will hit you with an unavoidable force.

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The Florida Project Review - IGN (2)

The Florida Project

A24

Theater

The Florida Project Review

great

The Florida Project is yet another emotional success for writer and director Sean Baker.

The Florida Project Review - IGN (3)

The Florida Project Review - IGN (4)

The Florida Project Review - IGN (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.

How accurate is the Florida project? ›

No, The Florida Project is fictional and not based on any one true story, but it's inspired by the real lives of people similar to its characters. On trips to visit his mother in Florida, Bergoch had begun to notice children and families staying in motels long term.

Is it worth watching the Florida Project? ›

A beautiful, heartbreaking story of class discrepancy outside of Disney World in Orlando, Florida. Sean Baker's intimate portrayal uses unconventional casting as he frames the lives of real residents living in a hotel outside of the resort in his otherwise fictional story.

Is the Florida Project appropriate for 12 year olds? ›

It really is one of the most realistic social issue movies ever. It also is just very hilarious and the kids are just so amazing. Every single actress/actor plays their role very nicely and well. This movie is really good and I recommend it for ages 13+.

Why was Halley throwing up? ›

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 Halley take swimsuit selfies? ›

In a scene, she asks her daughter to take provocative photos of her in a swimsuit, which she then posts online to publicize herself. She is selling an image of herself in order to receive financial satisfaction. It is seen that then, a series of men come to her motel room to receive this work in exchange for money.

Why did Halley beat up Ashley? ›

In desperation, Halley approaches Ashley to apologize and ask for money. Ashley criticizes Halley for doing sex work; enraged, Halley viciously beats her in front of Scooty.

Did Moonee actually go to Disney World? ›

The film intentionally leaves everything open-ended, never going back to tell audiences what happened to Moonee or her mom. In doing so, it also leaves it up to viewers to determine if the children's impromptu trip to Walt Disney World is real or their imagination.

What was the point of The Florida Project ending? ›

The movie downplays the contrast between the children's lives and the glitzy resort, focusing on their fun and mischief. The ending, where the children run away to Disney World, reflects the theme of finding happiness and agency in difficult circ*mstances.

Why is The Florida Project so nostalgic? ›

The creators behind them saw the film just as Baker intended, through the imaginative, innocent eyes of a child. I too feel a sense of nostalgia when I watch the movie, thinking of days when everything around me seemed so simple, the complexity of my situation not yet realized.

Why is The Florida Project so popular? ›

The Florida Project offers a colorfully empathetic look at an underrepresented part of the population that proves absorbing even as it raises sobering questions about modern America.

Did Netflix remove The Florida Project? ›

“The Shawshank Redemption,” “The Artist,” “Moneyball,” “August: Osage County” and Sean Baker's indie darling “The Florida Project” are just some of the Academy Award nominees of years' past that are leaving the streamer.

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.

Why is there always a helicopter 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.

What does The Florida Project teach us? ›

“The Florida Project” shows us how many children are living a life far from perfect, yet they come to school needing us to teach them, to feed them, to see beyond the mischief, misdeeds and bravado to the child within.

Who called Dcfs on Haley in the Florida Project? ›

I'm sure this may have been obvious, but Bobby definitely called the DCF on Halley, right? I'm 99% sure he did, after some post-movie thinkin'. 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.

Why did DCF take Moonee? ›

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.

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