The Napoleon formula for Sunshine

There seems to be a magic formula to securing a big hit. But can freshness be formulated?

As IndieWire blogger Eugene Hernandez just said in a post yesterday, Little Miss Sunshine seems to have hit on a formula that was first proven wildly successful by Napoleon Dynamite. That formula, as Hernandez's industry friend put it, is this:

Quirky comedy + funny dance number at end + premiere at Sundance + Cinetic = big sell to Fox Searchlight.

I completely resist the idea that formulas work in the film industry (or in any creative field, for that matter), but Hernandez's friend seems to be right about Napoleon and Sunshine. Sigh.

At least this formula is a bit more involved than the one several Slamdance films apparently tried last year: goofy protagonist + outcast friends = hilarious + endearing hit. (See Paul's post for more on this.)

So what's with the formulas? When Napoleon first came out, it was the freshness of the film's approach that made it work. It embodied the Anti-Formula. Obviously, trying to repeat freshness defeats the purpose. (How many times can you successfully repurpose a baby greens salad?) Anyway, I'm planning to see Sunshine tomorrow--I'm curious to see if it hits some version of a true "Napoleon Formula"--the anti-formula that isn't stale.

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