
Rating: 3 stars
Sunshine Cleaning—about a couple of down-on-their-luck sisters (Amy Adams and Emily Blunt) who start a crime scene clean-up business—suffers from a bit of whimsy overload. It’s one of those self-consciously quirky indie films—one sister communicates with God through a CB radio; their father (Alan Arkin) engages a series of improbable get-rich-quick schemes—that tend to do well at local art houses. Little Miss Sunshine, which Sunshine Cleaning rather slavishly takes cues from (I mean, could they be more obvious?) would be the gold standard.
Rose Lorkowski (Adams) is a former cheerleader and high school overachiever whose life got derailed by the birth of her son. She now has a dead-end job (cleaning houses), a deadbeat married boyfriend (Steve Zahn), and only the fading memories of her high school glory years. Her sister Norah (Blunt) is listless and jaded, an angry girl who drifts through life in a fog of disaffection. It’s Rose who decides to start the crime scene cleanup...













