Storytelling Strategies: The Florida Project and its Inversion of Tropes (2024)

The Florida Project the original name for Disney World during its inception combined with “the projects”, an alternative name for subsidised housing. This play on words describes the dichotomy of perspectives shown throughout the film – both the adult and child perspectives. The film documents families living in poverty at a rundown hotel ironically named, “The Magic Castle”. The protagonists – Moonie and her mom, Halley, struggle to pay for their hotel room each day due to Halley’s recklessness as a parent. Oftentimes at the cost of mischief, Moonie finds her own happiness at “The Magic Castle”. The adult and child perspectives throughout the film are in constant battle; tropes of children’s media unravel into troubling subject matter addressing poverty, atypical of the children’s media genre. Baker toys with the fine line between child’s play and child endangerment and through this, breeds a new context to situate films.

Trope #1: Unsupervised Fun

It’s no doubt that the film was inspired by The Little Rascals. Both have similar camera work at child-appropriate heights, both document children having fun amid poverty, and both include parents who are too busy to supervise their children. The Little Rascals, however, showcases the gang having unsupervised fun in a controlled environment. In the episode, “Hide and Shriek”, Alfalfa, Buckwheat, and Porky get in trouble by sneaking into a haunted house. The only consequence faced by the gang is being terrified by the fictitious monsters of the attraction. Sure, there is a shot in the haunted house that depicts the gang nearly sawed in half by a spinning blade, but the camera also reveals an amusem*nt park cart to remind the audience that the terrors are part of a safe ride. In The Florida Project, there is a sense of endangerment that accompanies the unsupervised fun. Moonee and her gang burn a house down for fun and vow not to tell any adults. The consequences of fun depicted in The Florida Project are not ephemeral like in children’s media such as The Little Rascals. The unsupervised fun in The Florida Project runs the risk of death.

Trope #2: Children going missing

Broadchurch explores how the death of a child affects a community, Dark is centered around families’ searches for the disappearances of their children children going missing is becoming a shortcut to tragedy, but Baker uses it to emphasise child neglect. As Moonee wanders of hotel property, the plot does not advance at a rapid pace and characters appear unaffected. Baker ensures that the shock value of this trope is not due to the characters’ shock upon figuring out Moonee is missing, but the audience’s shock upon figuring out no one cares. Moonee sets a house on fire and we are shocked that instead of worrying, Halley asks Moonee to pose for a picture in front of the house set ablaze. Moonee nearly encounters a pedophile on hotel property and instead of her mother coming to the rescue, Bobby, the hotel manager, is unofficially put in charge of caring for Moonee.

Trope #3: Bath Fun

The 2012 Pixar short animated film, Partysaurus Rex, opens with an action-packed sequence of bath time toys fighting at sea, only to cut to a wide shot of a kid playing with toys in a bubble bath. Barney & Friends released an episode on the fun of taking a bath titled, “Good Clean Fun!”. The Florida Project borrows the children’s media trope of “bath fun” and associates it with prostitution. Each time Halley prostitutes herself in the hotel room, the camera remains on Moonie playing with dolls in the bathtub. Moonie may be having fun in the bathtub, but there are cracks in the fun that reveal the situation. Moonie plays to loud rap music that drowns out the activities in the adjacent room and even encounters one of the men her mother is sleeping with when he barges in on her bath time. The camera focuses on Moonie; her reaction to the man is only seen and the “kid’s perspective” visually overshadows these portions of the film. Baker perverts the trope of “bath fun” to uncover the prostitution business of Moonie’s “Magic Kingdom”.

Trope #4: The Moving Experience

“The moving experience” is a recurrent plot line used in children’s media for suspense and sentimentality. The trope begins with a friendship put into jeopardy when one character moves away from another. In a turn of events, the trope ends on a lighter note; it may be discovered that the character will only be gone temporarily. In the Arthur episode titled, “The Faraway Friend”, Arthur finds out that his best friend, Buster, is moving overseas to stay with his dad. Although Arthur struggles with the absence of his best friend, he receives a package of souvenirs from Buster and a letter detailing the fun times he is having with his father. The ending of The Florida Project sends Moonee on a “moving experience” under duress. As the Department of Children and Families busts Halley for child neglect and prepares to take Moonee into foster care, Moonee is forced into “the moving experience”. Instead of following authorities, Moonee runs downstairs to her best friend, Jancey, and begs her to help her escape. While Buster’s moving experience is known ahead of time, under the supervision of a parent, and one he is excited for, Moonee’s is abrupt and forced. Baker warps “the moving experience” and we are confirmed in our beliefs of the child abuse that Moonee faces daily through her mother’s erratic lifestyle. Baker starts with the trope, but strays from its expected light ending when instead of an escape scene, dreamlike iPhone footage of Moonee and Jancey running to Disney World’s Magic Kingdom is shown. Given the unlikeliness of the girls reaching Disney World, it is assumed that the trope was broken by the “adult perspective”– Moonee was caught and taken away from her mother.

The Takeaway

The Florida Project is like children’s media on steroids; tropes are pushed to their limits and fun has extremely real consequences. The dark humour and intrigue of the film is found in being led to think playful tropes will be followed through, only for Baker to morph them into warning signs. Fortunately, the children in the film truly live at their Magic Castle – where even the most harrowing situations are disguised as play and diegetic sounds of children’s laughter can be heard in the background of any dire situation. It was difficult seeing characters deprived of basic rights, but it was more so difficult seeing a child take off their rose-coloured glasses and understand that their version of “fun” isn’t the majority’s. Baker’s film is only one of several award-winning films that utilise the technique of inverting children’s media tropes to situate a film teetering on the brink of child endangerment and play. Hirokazu Kore-eda’s Shoplifters and Jeremy Comte’s Fauve are more recent examples of films situated in the same context. So come awards season, see how many films upend traditional children’s media tropes and think about toppling tropes within other genres to contextualise your stories.

Britney Ngaw

Britney Ngaw is a New York-based filmmaker who ditched the suburbs of North York for New York to study Film and TV Production at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and Journalism at the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute.
Flex: Her works have screened worldwide, she was recently named a Tribeca Film Institute Fellow of 2019, and she hopes to continue contributing to this blog.
Greater flex: She’s attempting to learn how to kayak this summer in hopes of “accidentally” landing on North Brother Island to shoot a film.

Check out more of her work at Britneyngaw.com.

Storytelling Strategies: The Florida Project and its Inversion of Tropes (2024)

FAQs

Why did Halley take swimsuit selfies? ›

She enters the capitalistic mentality that she was not once part of. 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.

What is the foreshadowing in The Florida Project? ›

In one brilliantly foreshadowed scene, motel manager Bobby (Willem Dafoe) escorts a blatant paedophile away from the kids before threatening him never to come back; it's right on the fence of hilarity and horror; the former aided by the man's striking resemblance to Herbert The Pervert from Family Guy.

Did Ashley 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.

Why did Ashley stop being friends with Halley? ›

After Scooty's mother, Ashley (Mela Murder), discovers that the kids accidentally burned down an abandoned complex, she cuts off her ties and meals with Halley and tells Scooty that he can never hang out with Moonee again.

Who called CPS on Halley? ›

It's possible: Ashley's kept strict boundaries around herself and Scooty, but after she confronts Halley about her sex work, Halley lashes out and physically attacks her. It's more likely, though, that Bobby made the call (we can guess he's seen Ashley's badly bruised face and asked questions).

Did Moonee actually go to Disney? ›

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 is the message of The Florida Project? ›

The Objective Story Throughline of The Florida Project points out the dysfunctional ways of thinking that lead to this situation in Orlando. Tourists and residents looking the other way, pretending the problem doesn't exist, defines the inequity everyone faces in this story.

What is the conflict of The Florida Project? ›

From the opening moments, Sean Baker makes sure to draw the viewer into this reality, as a potentially melodramatic conflict between two families over the main children's messy behavior is leavened by the push-and-pull of the mothers' frustration and empathy.

Why did Halley throw up in the Florida project? ›

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.

What does the helicopter mean in the Florida Project? ›

There is a helicopter that continuously flies through the sky in “Tangerine” director Sean Baker's new film “The Florida Project.” It's a symbol of how the main character Moonee needs to fly away from her current circ*mstances and get a chance to start over before it's too late and she becomes like her mother.

Is The motel in the Florida Project Real? ›

The real-life location of this scene is Paradise Inn, situated at 4501 W Irlo Bronson Memorial Highway, Kissimmee. This location was transformed into the fictional Future Land motel for the movie.

Was Halley a bad mom in The Florida Project? ›

For those that have seen the film, whether it was one time or for the thousandth, no one of us can deny that Halley is, in plenty of regards, a bad mother, but she very much loves her daughter.

Why is The Florida Project sad? ›

The personal drama plays out though, and in the end it is a depressing film for how it does come over as very real - and ultimately how Moonee probably doesn't have that bright future that she deserves; not to say people cannot escape poverty - but there is almost nothing here to help them do it.

Is The Florida Project for kids? ›

Rated R for language throughout, disturbing behavior, sexual references and some drug material.

Why did they take swimsuit selfies Florida Project? ›

After Halley loses most of her monetary resources, she tells Moonee to change into her bathing suit: They're going to take “swimsuit selfies,” she says. Halley's suit is an extremely skimpy two-piece bikini, and she poses seductively. For a time thereafter, Moonee takes a lot of unsupervised baths.

Why did Halley throw up in The Florida Project? ›

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.

What was the photo Ashley showed Halley in The Florida Project? ›

He tells her all of her guests have to check in at the front desk, with ID, from now on. Desperate, Halley asks Ashley to loan her some money. Ashley accuses Halley of being a whor*—showing her a picture of her own online ad—and Halley responds by violently beating up Ashley in front of Scooty.

What was the point of The Florida Project movie? ›

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.

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