Tag: sunshine

  • Every Danny Boyle Directed Movie Ranked!

    Director Danny Boyle for Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Anthony Ghnassia.
    Director Danny Boyle for Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Anthony Ghnassia.

    Director Danny Boyle is one of the most accomplished and acclaimed filmmakers of his generation.

    His breakthrough film was 1996’s ‘Trainspotting‘, and he followed it up with such successful and popular movies as ‘28 Days Later‘, ‘Sunshine‘, ‘127 Hours‘, ‘Steve Jobs‘, ‘Yesterday‘, and ‘Slumdog Millionaire‘, which earned him an Oscar for Best Director.

    His latest movie, ‘28 Years Later‘, which is a follow up to his 2003 Zombie classic, opens in theaters on June 20th.

    In honor of the new film, Moviefone is ranking every movie Danny Boyle has ever directed, from infected to healthy.

    Let’s begin!


    14. ‘Millions‘ (2004)

    Alex Etel in 'Millions'. Photo: Pathé Distribution.
    Alex Etel in ‘Millions’. Photo: Pathé Distribution.

    Two boys, still grieving the death of their mother, find themselves the unwitting benefactors of a bag of bank robbery loot in the week before the United Kingdom switches its official currency to the Euro. What’s a kid to do?

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    13. ‘The Beach‘ (2000)

    Leonardo DiCaprio in 'The Beach'. Photo: 20th Century Fox.
    Leonardo DiCaprio in ‘The Beach’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    Twenty-something Richard (Leonardo DiCaprio) travels to Thailand and finds himself in possession of a strange map. Rumors state that it leads to a solitary beach paradise, a tropical bliss – excited and intrigued, he sets out to find it.

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    12. ‘A Life Less Ordinary‘ (1997)

    (L to R) Ewan McGregor and Cameron Diaz in 'A Life Less Ordinary'. Photo: PolyGram Filmed Entertainment.
    (L to R) Ewan McGregor and Cameron Diaz in ‘A Life Less Ordinary’. Photo: PolyGram Filmed Entertainment.

    A couple of angels, O’Reilly (Holly Hunter) and Jackson (Delroy Lindo), are sent to Earth to make sure that their next supervised love-connection succeeds. They follow Celine (Cameron Diaz), a spoiled rich girl who has just accidentally shot a suitor and, due to a misunderstanding, is kidnapped by janitor Robert (Ewan McGregor). Although Celine quickly frees herself, she stays with Robert for thrills. O’Reilly and Jackson pursue, hoping to unite the prospective lovers.

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    11. ‘Shallow Grave‘ (1995)

    (L to R) Christopher Eccleston, Kerry Fox and Ewan McGregor in 'Shallow Grave'. Photo: Rank Film Distributors.
    (L to R) Christopher Eccleston, Kerry Fox and Ewan McGregor in ‘Shallow Grave’. Photo: Rank Film Distributors.

    When David (Christopher Eccleston), Juliet (Kerry Fox), and Alex (Ewan McGregor) find their new roommate dead with a large sum of money, they agree to hide the body and keep the cash. However, this newfound fortune gradually corrodes their friendship.

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    10. ‘T2 Trainspotting‘ (2017)

    (L to R) Ewan McGregor and Jonny Lee Miller in 'T2 Trainspotting'. Photo: TriStar Pictures.
    (L to R) Ewan McGregor and Jonny Lee Miller in ‘T2 Trainspotting’. Photo: TriStar Pictures.

    After 20 years abroad, Mark Renton (Ewan McGregor) returns to Scotland and reunites with his old friends Sick Boy (Jonny Lee Miller), Spud (Ewan Bremner) and Begbie (Robert Carlyle).

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    9. ‘127 Hours‘ (2011)

    James Franco in '127 Hours'. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    James Franco in ‘127 Hours’. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    The true story of mountain climber Aron Ralston’s (James Franco) remarkable adventure to save himself after a fallen boulder crashes on his arm and traps him in an isolated canyon in Utah.

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    8. ‘Yesterday‘ (2019)

    Himesh Patel in 'Yesterday'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Himesh Patel in ‘Yesterday’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    A struggling musician (Himesh Patel) realizes he’s the only person on Earth who can remember The Beatles after waking up in an alternate reality where the group was forgotten.

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    7. ‘Trance‘ (2013)

    (L to R) Vincent Cassel, James McAvoy and Rosario Dawson in 'Trance'. Photo:
    (L to R) Vincent Cassel, James McAvoy and Rosario Dawson in ‘Trance’. Photo:

    A violent gang enlists the help of a hypnotherapist (Rosario Dawson) in an attempt to locate a painting which somehow vanished in the middle of a heist.

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    6. ‘28 Years Later‘ (2025)

    (L to R) Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and his son Spike (Alfie Williams) being chased on the causeway in Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and his son Spike (Alfie Williams) being chased on the causeway in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    It’s been almost three decades since the rage virus escaped a biological weapons laboratory, and now, still in a ruthlessly enforced quarantine, some have found ways to exist amidst the infected. One such group of survivors lives on a small island connected to the mainland by a single, heavily-defended causeway. When one of the group leaves the island on a mission into the dark heart of the mainland, he discovers secrets, wonders, and horrors that have mutated not only the infected but other survivors as well.

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    5. ‘Sunshine‘ (2007)

    Chris Evans in 'Sunshine'. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    Chris Evans in ‘Sunshine’. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    Fifty years into the future, the sun is dying, and Earth is threatened by arctic temperatures. A team of astronauts is sent to revive the Sun — but the mission fails. Seven years later, a new team is sent to finish the mission as mankind’s last hope.

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    4. ‘Slumdog Millionaire‘ (2008)

    (L to R) Dev Patel and Anil Kapoor in 'Slumdog Millionaire'. Photo: Pathé Distribution.
    (L to R) Dev Patel and Anil Kapoor in ‘Slumdog Millionaire’. Photo: Pathé Distribution.

    A teenager (Dev Patel) reflects on his life after being accused of cheating on the Indian version of ‘Who Wants to be a Millionaire?‘.

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    3. ‘Steve Jobs‘ (2015)

    Michael Fassbender in 'Steve Jobs'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Michael Fassbender in ‘Steve Jobs’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Set backstage at three iconic product launches and ending in 1998 with the unveiling of the iMac, Steve Jobs (Michael Fassbender) takes us behind the scenes of the digital revolution to paint an intimate portrait of the brilliant man at its epicenter.

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    2. ‘28 Days Later‘ (2003)

    Cillian Murphy in 2002's '28 Days Later.' Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    Cillian Murphy in 2002’s ’28 Days Later.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    Twenty-eight days after a killer virus was accidentally unleashed from a British research facility, a small group of London survivors are caught in a desperate struggle to protect themselves from the infected. Carried by animals and humans, the virus turns those it infects into homicidal maniacs — and it’s absolutely impossible to contain.

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    1. ‘Trainspotting‘ (1996)

    Ewan McGregor in 'Trainspotting'. Photo: PolyGram Filmed Entertainment.
    Ewan McGregor in ‘Trainspotting’. Photo: PolyGram Filmed Entertainment.

    Royal Tenenbaum (Gene Hackman) and his wife Etheline (Anjelica Huston) had three children (Ben Stiller, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Luke Wilson) and then they separated. All three children are extraordinary — all geniuses. Virtually all memory of the brilliance of the young Tenenbaums was subsequently erased by two decades of betrayal, failure, and disaster. Most of this was generally considered to be their father’s fault. “The Royal Tenenbaums” is the story of the family’s sudden, unexpected reunion one recent winter.

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  • 8 Great Chris Evans Performances That Aren’t Part of the MCU

    8 Great Chris Evans Performances That Aren’t Part of the MCU

    Universal Pictures

    We love Chris Evans as Captain America so much, we could watch those movies all day. But, of course, our favorite Chris (fight us!) has made many other worthy films outside the MCU.

    On the occasion of Evans’s 38th birthday, here are some of our favorite performances where he’s not playing Cap. Especially if you prefer your Evans bearded.

    8. “Cellular” (2004)

    New Line Cinema

    In this fast-paced popcorn movie, Evans plays ordinary (sometimes shirtless) college student Ryan, who gets a random call on his cell phone: The woman on the other end (Kim Basinger) claims to have been kidnapped and he’s her only hope. It’s up to Ryan to save the day, almost single-handed. Long before he played Cap, he showed us he had the right stuff for these kind of heroics.

    7. “The Iceman” (2013)

    Millennium Entertainment

    Evans’s role in this biopic of mob hitman Richard Kuklinski (Michael Shannon) isn’t large, but it is memorable. He plays fellow hitman, Robert Pronge, aka “Mr. Freezy,” who drove an ice cream truck — all the better to keep his victims on ice. It was from Pronge (nicknamed “Mister Softee” in real life), that Kuklinksi got the idea to freeze his own victims, thus earning the moniker “The Iceman.”

    6. “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” (2010)

    Universal

    Evans is a hoot and a half (with a very strong eyebrow game) as Lucas Lee, one of the seven evil exes Scott Pilgrim (Michael Cera)  must fight. Lee is a vain actor-slash-skateboarder, about as different a comic book role from Cap as you could get and Evans absolutely kills it.

    5. “Sunshine” (2007)

    Fox Searchlight Pictures

    This Danny Boyle sci-fi film, in which a crew must travel to a dying sun and reignite it to save earth, was woefully overlooked when it came out. Not only is the cast — including Evans, Cillian Murphy, Rose Byrne, Michelle Yeoh, Hiroyuki Sanada, Cliff Curtis, and Benedict Wong — great, but this existential space drama is head and shoulders above just about everything released since. Be prepared, it’s a trip.

    4. “The Losers”  (2010)

    Warner Bros.

    Our favorite character in this underrated action comedy about a black ops team: Evans’s techie Jensen. The scene where he gets an elevator to himself by singing along, far too enthusiastically with Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin” alone would cement that. But then, when he’s cornered in an office building, he confronts the armed security guards with just his bare hands. That’s when he delivers a speech that hilariously prefigures his role as Cap: “I’m warning you, I am a lethal killing machine. It was a secret government experiment. They did stuff to me. Spooky stuff…” Fortunately he’s got back-up, so his imaginary gunshots actually hit.

    3. “Snowpiercer” (2013)

    RADiUS-TWC

    In Bong Joon-Ho‘s gritty sci-fi action flick, the only people left alive after a geological catastrophe live on a supertrain that never stops moving. The front cars live in opulent luxury while the rearmost cars live with abject squalor and starvation. Evans is the guy who decides it’s time to lead a revolt and take over the train. Even if the social class metaphor doesn’t entirely work, the film features some terrific action sequences and some powerful scenes for Evans.

    2. “Gifted” (2017)

    Fox Searchlight Pictures

    Custody battle plots are usually a snooze, but we love this movie where Evans plays Frank, who’s fighting to give his math-genius niece (Mckenna Grace) a normal life instead of the high-pressure academic schooling his mother wants to set for her. Frank’s romance with his niece’s teacher (Jenny Slate, whom he also dated in real-life for a while) is a welcome bonus.

    1. “Puncture” (2011)

    Millennium Entertainment

    After 2005’s “Fantastic Four” (which looks better and better in retrospect), Evans became “that hot shirtless guy.” Evans understandably was frustrated that nobody was seeing his dramas like this one, where he plays a drug-addicted lawyer on the biggest case of his life. He’s still “that hot shirtless guy”  even in this film, at times, but here’s proof if you needed it that he’s got more than ample dramatic chops.

  • ‘Annihilation’ Director Alex Garland and Star Oscar Isaac On Crafting a New Sci-Fi Classic

    Alex Garland‘s “Annihilation,” based on the novel by Jeff VanderMeer, is the kind of challenging, uncompromised sci-fi classic that we only get every-so-often, standing shoulder-to-shoulder with such mind-bending behemoths as “2001” and “Blade Runner.”

    Garland, who has been the generation’s premiere voice of heady science fiction (he wrote “Sunshine,” “Dredd,” “28 Days Later,” and wrote and directed “Ex Machina“), elevates the genre further with “Annihilation.” It’s the story of a husband named Kane (Oscar Isaac) and a wife named Lena (Natalie Portman) and how they fall apart before he takes a risky mission to explore an uninhabitable patch of land called Area X. This place is infected with some kind of otherworldly, oily gunk and nicknamed The Shimmer by a shadowy government agency called the Southern Reach.

    After Kane returns, uh, different, Lena and a group of like-minded scientists (including Jennifer Jason Leigh and Tessa Thompson) venture into The Shimmer to try and figure out what, exactly, has happened and how they can stop it. And that’s when things get really weird.

    We were lucky enough to get to chat with Garland and Isaac (reuniting after a memorable collaboration on “Ex Machina”) about what they were influenced by, how they developed the characters, and what (if anything) keen-eyed viewers should look out for.

    Considering how going in blind is the best way to experience “Annihilation,” consider this a SPOILER WARNING.

    MOVIEFONE: When did you first start talking about this? Oscar, were you very eager to do whatever Alex did next?

    Oscar Isaac: Even during “Ex Machina,” I was thinking that I want to do everything that Alex does. So I was very excited when he said he had a script and there was a part in it for me. So I read it and immediately started talking about it and figuring out how I could be involved.

    Did you immediately think about him, Alex?

    Alex Garland: Well, we got to know each other in preparing for “Ex Machina,” in truth. And then we properly stayed in touch. We’re proper friends.

    So, actually, aside from enjoying working together and respecting each other, we properly know each other and I would imagine, and I think the reason I don’t remember ever having first told Oscar about it, is because it would have just come up in conversation. There were other projects that had been floating around my head — and we had been talking about them — but it was always a given for me that I would see if Oscar wanted to do it. It was a default state, really. So there wouldn’t have been a particular moment. It was part of a rolling conversation that hasn’t stopped now.

    Oscar, would you have been walking by in a HAZMAT suit in the background if he’d asked you to?

    Isaac: Yes. I would have asked for a lot of money but …

    Garland: Yeah, he would have, anyway.

    What was it like adapting the novel? And Oscar, did you have input, too? This character is pretty different than what you see in the novel.

    Garland: The adaptation thing was complex in some respects. There were two things about the book that really struck me hard. One was that it was original. It just wasn’t like other books. It wasn’t like other stories. That alone makes it unusual. Most stories we tell are versions of other stories that have already been told — on a holistic level, actually, from themes to plot to characters and everything.

    And the other thing was that it has this extremely strong hallucinogenic atmosphere. With any adaptation, and this is only the third one I’ve done, I try to figure out: What is the thing that I’m adapting? And in this instance, it was the feeling, the experience of reading the book; it was the atmosphere of the book. That was the thing that I was concerned about.

    What about in terms of Oscar’s character?

    Isaac: Well, the character then is in service to that. If the key is the atmosphere and how you translate that, then Kane is, in a way, a tool to explore that. The different phases of how we see Kane, the physicality of that, what is happening, the subtext of all that and how it charges the scene, we spoke about all of that.

    We spoke about what point does Kane know what’s happening with Lena? At what point is the way he’s behaving with her influenced by the knowledge he has or doesn’t have? We talked about that. We talked a bit about where he’s from, and how that affects his speech. For me, we landed on a Northern Florida accent. I grew up in Florida and I had a lot of friends who had that way of speaking. All of those little bits and pieces [were important]. In each individual scene, we would try it different ways to see all of the ways it could go.Were there any touchstones that either of you were looking towards, in the science fiction genre, when crafting this?

    Garland: As much as possible, in a way, you try and shed yourself of the things you love, to rid yourself of them. At a certain point, when I’m working on a film, I stop watching any movies and I stop looking at TV and I stop reading books or anything like that to try and get away. But, of course, you do know those things. They’re tattooed into us, into our awareness. So what you do is, when you’re aware of something you can’t shed, you think about how to subvert it.

    Within the stories that we tell and retell, you tend to end with a punch-up of one sort or another. It might be in a courtroom or in a street, it might be a gunfight or a car chase, but it’s still a punch-up. And you think: How do we have this and acknowledge it but also subvert it? So we had our punch-up super ritualized, but also a literal kind of dance in some respects.

    There’s a bear that appears a few times in the narrative and there it was notionally, you’ve got a monster. In all sorts of films, but particularly science fiction films, a monster will appear. It became how can we subvert the nature of a monster? And also, I want to say, it’s not just about trying to subvert genre tropes. All of these things have to dovetail and support the themes and the story.

    So the bear becomes about the damage. It’s not just a bear, it’s a broken, fractured, tragic character in the narrative and it had to have allusions within it. Like, where did the bear come from? Why did it manifest itself in this house? Does the physical structure of the house echo the house where the marriage takes place? So much of it is organic. I’m not sure if people will ever clock it. But just to draw attention to where things are drawn in the film.

    Oscar’s character has a bear tattoo on his chest, so it’s not a coincidence that the creature that arrives in the house is a bear. And so it goes on.

    Oscar, was he talking to you about all of this stuff?

    Isaac: No. Because what was important was not stuff that was composed. It was stuff that we arrived at organically. Or it was there in the script and it was being teased out. So, what Alex does really well, is he writes a script that has so much depth to it already, but enough ambiguity and mystery that he allows for his collaborators to arrive at things and really feel ownership of them as well. Through that ownership, it’s a very truthful approach. This film has so much to it. It’s deeply horrifying in some ways, there’s a real thrill and beauty to some of these images — they’re so strange and alien, but filled with deep emotion and pain — and also intimate.

    So, for me, what I love most about it is you have these incredibly tense, beautiful, horrible scenarios — but at the same time — there’s a very deep, intimate story about a marriage at the center of it.

    You both just talked about the layers of meaning and symbolism. Is there anything else you want people to keep an eye out for maybe in the second or third viewing?

    Garland: Oh, actually, I was slightly kicking myself for having said that stuff about the bear. Honestly, I think the ideal way to see a movie is to know nothing about the film except right before you walk into the film somebody says to you, “This film is going to be crap.”

    So you have low expectations and no information. So I feel like I’m always weirdly undermining the thing by talking about it. So, no, there isn’t anything I’d say. And I’ll just look back in time and erase the thing I said. But there is some truth in that, because a real sense of discovery is a really pleasurable thing. And not being front-loaded, like, “Look out for this!” Just having a pure experience between a group of people who made a narrative for you to experience and then you get to experience it and make your own mind up. I think there’s something really nice about that.

    Annihilation” infects theaters nationwide tomorrow. Do not miss it (it’s not crap).

  • Discover ‘Sunshine,’ the Perfect Summer Sci-Fi Flick You’ve Never Seen

    SUNSHINETen years ago, an ambitious science-fiction film was quietly released in American cinemas. Despite having an all-star international cast and the might of one of cinema’s greatest living filmmakers, it barely made any money and was critically ignored (it got a wishy-washy 64 on Metacritic). But Danny Boyle‘s “Sunshine” has proved an enduring cult classic, and if you’re getting tired of the overblown, overlong summer sci-fi spectacles, you’d be right in giving “Sunshine” a go. It’s available on most streaming platforms and clocks in at a svelte hour and 47 minutes.

    “Sunshine” is set just 50 years into the future. At this point, the sun is dying so Earth has been thrust into a new ice age. A group of scientists, towing a nuclear weapon the size of Manhattan, are on a quest to deliver the payload into the sun, effectively reigniting it. Along the way, though, our intrepid crew (populated with a wonderfully multi-cultural cast that includes Cillian Murphy, Chris Evans, Michelle Yeoh, Rose Byrne, Hiroyuki Sanada, Cliff Curtis and Benedict Wong) investigate what happened to the first such vessel that attempted this voyage and may be fighting with the psychological effects of being so close to the sun. Just keep in mind, especially based on that description, whatever you think “Sunshine” is going to be; it’s not.

    Most of this has to do with Alex Garland’s ingenious script. Garland had teamed with Boyle before; his novel “The Beach” was adapted by the director and Garland provided the script for their zombie refresh “28 Days Later.” But this was something new and different, it was much bigger than either of them had imagined; it took a full year to refine the script and another whole year to complete editing and visual effects.

    Eventually, the two creative principles ended up taking very difference stances on what the movie meant, to the point that it drove a wedge between them (they never worked together again). Whatever philosophical jousting went on behind the scenes, that creative friction did wonders for the movie. This is a movie that, like all of Boyle’s films, feels very vital and alive in a way that few manufactured pop confections that flood the marketplace in the summer months do.

    Part of that has to do with the streamlined nature of the film, which owes a debt to everything from “Alien” to “2001,” with Boyle and Garland chopping away extraneous romantic subplots and unnecessary dialogue. This is a movie where everything feeds into the propulsive nature of the central narrative. And as much as the movie harkens back to classic science-fiction tales of old, it is unlike anything that has come before it (or since).

    The movie is about the sun, a celestial being that gives us life but that interests few science-fiction filmmakers, and it is fearless in the way that it hops between genres. It’s clear that Garland and Boyle wanted to do an ode to the films that they loved but to really take it someplace new. This is a movie that is as comfortable getting into heady existential debates about the nature of humanity and where we come from, as it is goosing you with a suspense set piece that will truly have you biting your nails. It’s this combination of the humane and the celestial, the highfalutin and the wildly entertaining, that makes “Sunshine” such a blast.But this odd mix does have its detractors.

    Now, let us talk, in veiled terms (of course) about the controversial third act.

    Now, everybody loves to talk about a big twist. There are endless think pieces written about great twists; they inspire fierce water cooler conversations and ignite debate. (Just the other day, I was at a local fast food joint and overheard a conversation about who, exactly, Zendaya is playing in “Spider-Man: Homecoming.”) In “Sunshine,” the third act takes a wild left turn that will either leave you exhilarated or bewildered.

    While programming a block of movies on British satellite channel Sky, Quentin Tarantino chose the film before calling its climax a “creative nosedive.” “The third act tumbling goes far beyond disappointment. The feeling I experienced was betrayal,” Tarantino said. “It goes against every aspect of that film’s aesthetic that preceded it.” Beyond an incredibly lengthy (shocking!) Reddit post, there aren’t that many defenders of the last third of “Sunshine.”

    But that’s okay.

    One, it’s a movie that will get you talking. How many current sci-fi blockbusters can you even muster a sentence about? How many just leave you blubbering puddles of goo, after being beaten into submission by two plus hours of nonstop visual effects insanity? So the fact that the ending of “Sunshine” will make you talk is wonderful. Tarantino even admits that the first two acts of the film are so good that no matter how disastrous you think the third act might be, it still doesn’t lessen the film’s impact (this is also true). And something that people just aren’t owning up to: the third act is actually pretty cool. I’m hesitant to talk about just how the movie transforms, but patient and open-minded viewers will be rewarded for sure.

    My suggestion: crank up the air conditioning, pull down the blinds, and get lost in the world of “Sunshine.”