Paul Dano, Toni Collette, Abigail Breslin and Greg Kinnear attend the Park City Legacy showing of their movie, 'Little Miss Sunshine,' directed by filmmakers Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, during the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, on Jan. 28, 2026. Credit: Courtesy of Sundance Institute Share on Facebook Share on X Google Preferred Share to Flipboard Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Send an Email Print the Article Post a Comment Sundance shined a light on Searchlight's Little Miss Sunshine Wednesday night by hosting what turned out be an electric 20th anniversary screening inside Park City's Eccles Theatre. And some of those rays fell on Paul Dano, who made his first public appearance since Quentin Tarantino shocked the internet by criticizing the actor's work in Paul Thomas Anderson's There Will Be Blood, opposite Daniel Day-Lewis, by labeling him the "flaw" of the film and dissing Dano as "weak sauce, man." In the weeks since, filmmakers, peers and countless fans have shown their support. Related Stories Movies 'The Shitheads' Review: Dave Franco and O'Shea Jackson Jr. Go on a Hellish Road Trip That Gets Better as It Goes Movies 'Tell Me What You Feel' Digs Into New Masculinity and How Capitalism and "Over-Therapeutization" Affect Modern Love But it wasn't until this week that the actor addressed it himself. During a Little Miss Sunshine press event at Sundance ahead of the screening, Dano told Variety that fielding the love "was really nice," adding, "I was also incredibly grateful that the world spoke up for me so I didn't have to." When asked about the controversy, Little Miss Sunshine co-star Toni Collette also told Variety, "Are we really going there? Fuck that guy [Tarantino]. Who does that?" Back to the screening. Dano and Collette joined co-stars Abigail Breslin and Greg Kinnear and their director bosses Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris at the screening. The showing was part of Sundance's Park City Legacy program to highlight standout films from the festival's past before it moves to Boulder, Colorado. Little Miss Sunshine debuted at Sundance on Jan. 20, 2006. The film centers on the Hoover family, including dad Richard (Kinnear), mom Sheryl (Collette), a suicidal uncle Frank (Steve Carell), a teen boy who's taken a vow of silence Dwayne (Dano), the perky daughter Olive (Breslin) and a sexed-up drug addict grandfather (Arkin). They pile into a Volkswagen bus bound for California to support Olive in a bid to win the Little Miss Sunshine Contest. The sanity of everyone involved is stretched to the limit as the group's quirks cause epic problems as they travel along their interstate route. Sundance festival director Eugene Hernandez had the honor of welcoming the creative team to the stage following the screening, which was the final festival event ever to be held at Eccles. "The funny thing is they say that lightning doesn't strike twice, but watching this movie again in this theater, I can't help but feel like it fell 20 years ago at this festival," Hernandez said, noting that it had its world premiere inside the same venue. "What a great audience you were." He then introduced Dayton and Faris, who received a standing ovation, which kept going as Hernandez welcomed each actor to the stage one by one, saying that "every one of them deserves an ovation" and predicting that "I think it's going to get louder and louder as I say them." The applause volume did indeed increase as Collette, Kinnear, Dano and Breslin walked out. But the applause was especially warm and raucous for Dano. A few moments later, after Hernandez had introduced the entire roster of panelists - the filmmakers and actors were joined by Little Miss Sunshine's Oscar-winning scribe Michael Arndt (who revealed that he wrote 100 drafts of the screenplay) and producers Albert Berger, David Friendly, Peter Saraf, Ron Yerxa and Jeb Brody - the group took their seats on stage. As they did so, two audience members loudly exclaimed, "We love you, Paul!" The actor looked surprised and touched by the response. "We love you, Paul!" "We love you, Paul!" Two fans show love to Paul Dano during an electric Little Miss Sunshine 20th anniversary screening at #SundanceFilmFestival. It was Dano's first public appearance since Quentin Tarantino slammed his as "weak sauce" in Paul Thomas... pic.twitter.com/lngQYWK6vm- Chris Gardner (@chrissgardner) January 29, 2026 "To have everyone together after all this time, this is a miracle," Dayton said to start the conversation. "And thank you guys for helping make it happen." It happened on a night when much of the industry and Hollywood attendees had left Park City already. In an interesting twist, when Hernandez asked the audience how many people hadn't seen the film, at least half of the audience raised their hands. "There's a whole bunch of people who saw it for the first time, which is amazing," he noted, to wh
The Hollywood Reporter
Sundance Goes Wild for Paul Dano in First Public Appearance Since Quentin Tarantino Comments
January 30, 2026
6 days ago
17 celebrities mentioned