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IMDbPro

Miss Firecracker

  • 1989
  • PG
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Tim Robbins, Holly Hunter, Scott Glenn, Mary Steenburgen, and Alfre Woodard in Miss Firecracker (1989)
Home Video Trailer from Corsair Pictures
Play trailer0:31
1 Video
77 Photos
SatireComedyDrama

Carnelle wants to escape her dreary life, so she enters a local beauty contest, much to everyone's dismay.Carnelle wants to escape her dreary life, so she enters a local beauty contest, much to everyone's dismay.Carnelle wants to escape her dreary life, so she enters a local beauty contest, much to everyone's dismay.

  • Director
    • Thomas Schlamme
  • Writer
    • Beth Henley
  • Stars
    • Holly Hunter
    • Mary Steenburgen
    • Tim Robbins
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Thomas Schlamme
    • Writer
      • Beth Henley
    • Stars
      • Holly Hunter
      • Mary Steenburgen
      • Tim Robbins
    • 28User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
    • 58Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Miss Firecracker
    Trailer 0:31
    Miss Firecracker

    Photos77

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    Top cast45

    Edit
    Holly Hunter
    Holly Hunter
    • Carnelle Scott
    Mary Steenburgen
    Mary Steenburgen
    • Elain Rutledge
    Tim Robbins
    Tim Robbins
    • Delmount Williams
    Alfre Woodard
    Alfre Woodard
    • Popeye Jackson
    Scott Glenn
    Scott Glenn
    • Mac Sam
    Veanne Cox
    Veanne Cox
    • Tessy Mahoney
    Ann Wedgeworth
    Ann Wedgeworth
    • Miss Blue
    Trey Wilson
    Trey Wilson
    • Benjamin Drapper
    Amy Wright
    Amy Wright
    • Missy Mahoney
    Kathleen Chalfant
    Kathleen Chalfant
    • Miss Lily
    Robert Fieldsteel
    Robert Fieldsteel
    • Tommy Turner
    Greg Germann
    Greg Germann
    • Ronnie Wayne
    Avril Gentles
    • Mrs. Biggs
    Bert Remsen
    Bert Remsen
    • Mr. Morton
    Angela Turner
    • Caroline Jefferson
    Lori Hayes
    Lori Hayes
    • Sally Chin
    Barbara Welch
    • Joe Ann Jacobs
    Billy Nichols
    • Auctioneer
    • Director
      • Thomas Schlamme
    • Writer
      • Beth Henley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    6.02.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8bellino-angelo2014

    Wacky but deeper than what it seems

    Carnelle Scott (Holly Hunter) enters the title contest in her town of Yazoo City, Mississippi staged every Fourth of July in the hope of winning like her cousin Elaine (Mary Steenburgen) did two years ago. Carnelle was raised by her cousin and she has less grace than an elephant in a crystal shop, but still hopeful to win. One day her weird cousin Delmont (Tim Robbins) is released from the mental hospital and hopes to sell their house for making money: Carnelle sees this as an incentive for winning the contest and escape her small town life. Carnelle doesn't win the contest because Elain lies to her about the delay of the dress and she comes with a older dress. She is frustrated, but not for long because she understands that the contest isn't everything.

    I liked Holly Hunter's performance as a woman determined to win the title contest, but the most memorable role is that of Tim Robbins' as the looney cousin that doesn't think too straight. There were some funny moments and the ending makes you think. So, while not exactly a comedy, it's still intelligent and original... certainly a reason enough to rediscover it on YouTube since it's very obscure.
    7blanche-2

    small-town beauty contest with lots going on

    Based on the play of the same name, Miss Firecracker stars Holly Hunter repeating her off-Broadway stage role, along with Mary Steenburgen, Tim Robbins, Alfre Woodward, Scott Glenn, and Ann Wedgeworth.

    This film is about a small Southern town and its beauty pageant, which takes place on the 4th of July.

    It's not a coincidence that the playwright, Beth Henley, has the pageant held on Independence Day, because that's what the film is really about. Independence from the opinions of others, independence from the ties of what someone has set as a standard of beauty, the independence to explore and find yourself.

    Carnelle Scott is a young local woman, and she believes that if she can be Miss Firecracker, she will receive the validation she has always craved, and then leave the town and go onto success elsewhere. She has no friends in town, and her reputation is not the best. She has a boyfriend who adores her (Glenn) but it isn't enough.

    One inspiration for her is her cousin, Elain, and there, Carnelle doesn't see the forest for the trees. Elain is a past Miss Firecracker. She's not only totally self-involved, but her life is built around her past victories. To Carnelle, Elain's life is perfect.

    Elain's brother is the volatile Delmount (Robbins) who wants to sell the house Carnelle lives in. He'll split the money with her. He was released from a mental institution; Elain and her husband refused to take him in.

    Since this is the last year Carnelle is eligible, she decides to go for the pageant in a big way. And one thing she wants is to wear the bright red evening gown that Elain wore when she won; she has even dyed her hair bright red to match it.

    Carnelle's major support comes from Popeye Jackson (Woodward), a young woman who wears Coke bottle glasses and works in a dress shop. Popeye helps Carnelle be outfitted for the pageant, and develops a crush on Delmount.

    Though the character of Carnelle is the focus of the film, the one to be emulated is Popeye - kind, helpful, and uncaring about people's appearance. She's more interested in what's inside. And hopefully along the way this is what Carnelle learns as well.

    Very sweet film and Hunter is dynamite as Carnelle. The movie is bigger than the play, which may not have been the best option for it. The direction by Thomas Schlamme, who has found great success in television, is only so-so. It should be a tighter production.

    Don't miss Carnelle's part in the talent competition.
    8Sylviastel

    Sometimes Winning isn't Everything!

    Carnelle has lived in Yazoo City, Mississippi in her aunt and uncle's house since she was orphaned as a child. She grew up with her cousins Delmount (Tim Robbins) and Elain (Mary Steenburgen).

    Delmount comes home from a mental institution and wants to sell the family home. Elain comes home from Atlanta where she has her own problems. Elain won the Miss Firecracker beauty pageant years ago. Carnelle decides to enter the pageant in her last official year with regards to her age.

    Alfre Woodard played Popeye Wilson, a seamstress, who has a crush on Delmount. The film is rich in character development and this film should be shown around the Fourth of July summertime. Ann Wedgeworth played a pageant coordinator. The film was done in 1989 after an off-Broadway play of the same name. The film is heartwarming about really winning. Carnelle wanted to redeem herself and reputation.
    9gracie28

    rip roaring funny

    A hilarious sendup of beauty contests, with a nice wry twist and laugh out loud southern humor. Wacky characters, well casted and good solid acting. Mary Steenburgen is wonderful and Holly Hunter is the best! You may not get if if you are not from the South and if you are "serious" about beauty pageants.
    7LAWigley

    Independence Day for Miss Firecracker

    "Physiognomy": the act of judging people by their physical appearance.

    As in her first film, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Crimes of the Heart, Beth Henley has created a collection of off-beat Southern Gothic characters. These characters seem familiar like old friends (or more like black-sheep cousins), ut the film goes beyond its representation of these endearing characters to explore deeper themes, to ask whether appearances are really important.

    The Miss Firecracker Contest, is superficially, a comedy about a small town Southern beauty pageant, in which Henley reflects in a sardonic manner on how and why women put themselves through such contests. The pageant, however, merely frames the action. The play is ultimately about appearances. Henley introduces the idea that women shape their identities and bodies in terms of the opinions of other people, and the more important issue of breaking away from stereotypes in order to discover your personality. The beauty pageant is even held on the Fourth of July -- Independence Day.

    All of the women in this play, except Popeye, define themselves in relation to the contest. Staying with Henley's successful formula of an insecure heroine who searches for acceptance from society and her family, The Miss Firecracker Contest is dominated by the beauty queen "wannabe," Carnelle Scott (a role created on stage by then little-known Southern actress Holly Hunter). Carnelle is not merely competing for the crown; she wants to win the contest so that she can win acceptance from the town of Brookhaven, Mississippi, shed her tawdry reputation, and leave the town in a "crimson blaze of glory." Carnelle's own name even expresses her sexual nature -- the derivation of her name, "carnal," means pleasures of a sexual nature.

    Her cousin and idol, Elain, is a self-absorbed former pageant winner -- a Scarlett O'Hara for the twentieth century -- still living off the glory of her youth. Even Tessy Mahoney, one of the two ugliest girls in town, takes pleasure in the authority of the whistle and clipboard she wields as pageant coordinator. Of the women, only Popeye -- with her coke-bottle glasses -- is more concerned with "seeing" than with being seen. An admirer of beauty that transcends physical appearance, she serves as a mirror through which others may see their own self-worth.

    The Miss Firecracker Contest continues Beth Henley's examination of the South -- and especially of small-town Southern women. In pursuing this theme, she is following in the steps of earlier Southern playwrights, such as Lillian Hellman and Tennessee Williams. And like Southern author William Faulkner with his fictitious county of Yoknapatawpha, Mississippi, Henley appears to be establishing a physical universe and a cast of familiar characters for her canon of plays.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Miss Firecracker (1989) was written by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Beth Henley and is based on her 1984 play The Miss Firecracker Contest. Holly Hunter reprised the role of Carnelle Scott, whom she played in an off-Broadway production of Henley's play.
    • Quotes

      Delmount Williams: Please, don't make me treat you like dogs. I don't want to treat you like common dogs.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Miss Firecracker/K-9/Criminal Law/Scandal/84 Charlie Mopic (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      Surrender
      Written by Doc Pomus (as D. Pomus), Mort Shuman (as M. Schuman) and Ernesto De Curtis (uncredited)

      Performed by Elvis Presley

      Courtesy of RCA Records

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    FAQ19

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 19, 1990 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • En tjej med glöd
    • Filming locations
      • Yazoo City, Mississippi, USA
    • Production companies
      • Corsair Pictures
      • Firecracker Company
      • Guadalupe Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,852,655
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $45,293
      • Apr 30, 1989
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,852,655
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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