Endangered species
John Sayles' Sunshine State begins with a scene that
looks mysterious, even ominous. A pirate ship's sail burns in
the night, the flame seeming to float in the darkness. The
camera cuts to a boy's face, watching the fire, and then, as the
camera pulls out, you see that he's in a parking lot, that this
is not a ship at all, but a parade float. Within a couple of
minutes, the cops arrive to pick up the culprit.
This brief opening sets up various thematic threads -- the
commodification of history, the deceptiveness of appearances,
the gaps between generations, the paving of paradise to put up a
parking lot -- in a manner that is at once deft and abstract.
While young Terrell (Alexander Lewis) is plainly in trouble
here, the arrest is actually the least of it (you learn later in
the film that when he was even younger, Terrell witnessed a
terrible familial violence). He's a quiet kid, not inclined to
talk much with his guardian, Eunice (Mary Alice), though it's
also apparent that, in their silence, they share a mutual trust
and affection. In Sunshine State, this closeness, however
unspoken, is unusual: it's a film about the many ways that
people come to be disconnected, from each other, their pasts,
and their homes.
As it happens, the pirate ship float that Terrell has burned is
(or rather, was) a prominent fixture in Plantation Island,
Florida's annual Buccaneer Days parade. Its destruction makes
life hard for Francine (Mary Steenburgen), the Chamber of
Commerce official who is in charge of the festivities. As corny
as these festivities might appear to you -- treasure chests
loaded with local merchants' wares; folks dressed in pirate
"gear" (with bandanas, eye patches, and plastic parrots on their
shoulders); booths selling "pirate" vittles -- for Francine, the
effort to pull it all together is exhausting. "You have no idea
how hard it is to invent a tradition," she wails. What she
doesn't see is how disconnected this invention is from anyone
around her.
The disjunctions between Terrell and Francine -- angry black
boy and anxious white lady -- have parallels in most every
storyline in Sunshine State. The residents of Plantation
Island have long been divided into two communities, black and
white, and increasingly, they are divided along generational
lines as well, generations defined in part by who owns land, who
feels committed to traditions, and who is yearning to move on.
Shot on and modeled after Amelia Island, this area includes an
African American enclave called Lincoln beach (modeled after
American Beach, Florida's first black resort community,
established in 1935 by insurance entrepreneur A. L. Lewis) --
it's a region in transition. While some old timers want to hang
onto some semblance of their history, many residents are selling
their property to developers, who plan to reshape the area into
an upscale resort.
Against this background, two complex women are dealing with
their own transitions: Desirée (Angela Bassett) is returning to
Lincoln Beach to reconcile with Eunice, the mother who sent her
away some 20 years earlier, when the 15-year-old Desirée became
pregnant. All these years later, Desirée resents what she
perceives as Eunice's embarrassment at her daughter's "showing
[her] color." AT the same time, Eunice resents what she sees as
Desirée's abandonment of her family. Equally proud and strong,
the women find it difficult to compromise; fortunately, their
reunion is somewhat tempered by the presence of Terrell and
Desirée's new husband, generous and even-tempered Chicago
anesthesiologist Reggie (James McDaniel).
Desirée is also dealing with another issue, unbeknownst to her
mother, that is, the father of her child (who died shortly after
birth) has come back to town. The former Florida Flash (Tom
Wright), a college football legend until his knees gave out, is
in town fronting for the white developers, encouraging black
landowners, including Eunice, to sell (he says he sees it not as
"speculation, more like preservation"). And he, in turn, must
confront resistance in the form of Dr. Lloyd (Bill Cobbs), a
diehard civil rights activist who, while understanding that the
movement created a mixed economy where all the "little people"
might be equally exploited, still tries to rally the locals to
oppose the encroaching development: When Reggie asks if this is
"an ecological thing," Lloyd smiles and nods: "We're trying to
save an endangered species, us."
A second but inevitably intertwined narrative revolves around
Marly (Edie Falco), a 6th generation Islander, finally realizing
that managing her father's restaurant and hotel on Delrona Beach
(the white section of the Island) is not what she wants to do.
In order to move on, however, she has to admit that she has her
own desires -- to herself, her stubborn, once staunchly
segregationist, now blind father Furman (Ralph Waite), and her
steely mother, Delia (Jane Alexander). Until now, Marly has put
her life's energies into pleasing her parents (her father still
mourns the deaths of her twin brothers, local basketball stars
who drove their car off a bridge after a high school party) and
also resisting them (she ran off with her rock singer husband
[perfectly gawky Richard Edson] and worked as a Weeki Watchee
mermaid). She still sees her decision to return home and run the
hotel as a kind of defeat, a surrendering of her dreams (at one
point, she says, she wanted to be an oceanographer), and manages
her frustration with a quick wit and curt manner.
Even as developers come calling on Eunice to sell her
beachfront property, so too do they approach Marly about the
hotel. Spotting one skulking across the street, Marly sneers,
"Buzzards," and marches outside to challenge him. He turns out
to be less of an ogre than she anticipates, however; landscape
architect Jack Meadows (Timothy Hutton) is passionate about the
aesthetics of his work (admiring, for instance, Frederick Law
Olmsted). And for the most part, he tries not to think about the
politics and economics. When Marly accosts him, he says he's
just trying to imagine what the place will look like "without
any buildings on it." She snaps back, "Oh! Like you're kind of
mentally undressing it?"
Though she'd never admit it, Marly inherits her humor and
resilience from Delia, a drama teacher, theater manager, and
conservationist who has long begrudged Furman's investment in
the hotel (which she sees as a cheesy corruption of the land
long before the developers show up), and settles for community
theater and working with local disadvantaged and otherwise
"troubled" kids (she calls herself "the Sarah Bernhardt of
Delrona Beach"). When Terrell is sentenced to community service
for his arson, Desirée takes him to Delia, her own former
teacher; Delia assigns him to make a coffin for her, as she's
playing the dead mother in a stage adaptation of Faulkner's
As I Lay Dying.
It's hard to miss the major symbolism here, and in that way, as
well as in its attention to intricate sociopolitical tensions,
Sunshine State, recalls Sayles' previous work. His
filmmaking isn't subtle, but it is often moving and resolutely
complex. As much as Delia, Francine, and Eunice try to hang on
to traditions (whether invented or historical, as much as these
might be differentiated), Marly and Desirée are trying to make
sense of the intersections of past, present, and possible
futures. As they struggle, the film makes clear that, as
abstractions and ideals, as well as lived experiences, history
and what's to come can't be congruent or continuous. Whatever
sense they might make emerges from those individuals and
communities who put in the work.
18 July 2002