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My Kid Could Paint That

  • 2007
  • PG-13
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
3.6K
YOUR RATING
My Kid Could Paint That (2007)
Theatrical Trailer from Sony Pictures Classics
Play trailer2:00
7 Videos
14 Photos
DocumentaryFamilyMystery

A look at the work and surprising success of a four-year-old girl whose paintings have been compared to the likes of Picasso and has raked in hundreds of thousands of dollars.A look at the work and surprising success of a four-year-old girl whose paintings have been compared to the likes of Picasso and has raked in hundreds of thousands of dollars.A look at the work and surprising success of a four-year-old girl whose paintings have been compared to the likes of Picasso and has raked in hundreds of thousands of dollars.

  • Director
    • Amir Bar-Lev
  • Stars
    • Marla Olmstead
    • Laura Olmstead
    • Mark Olmstead
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    3.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Amir Bar-Lev
    • Stars
      • Marla Olmstead
      • Laura Olmstead
      • Mark Olmstead
    • 32User reviews
    • 64Critic reviews
    • 74Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 nominations total

    Videos7

    My Kid Could Paint That
    Trailer 2:00
    My Kid Could Paint That
    My Kid Could Paint That: Marla Putting Together A Puzzle
    Clip 0:20
    My Kid Could Paint That: Marla Putting Together A Puzzle
    My Kid Could Paint That: Marla Putting Together A Puzzle
    Clip 0:20
    My Kid Could Paint That: Marla Putting Together A Puzzle
    My Kid Could Paint That: 60 Minutes
    Clip 1:13
    My Kid Could Paint That: 60 Minutes
    My Kid Could Paint That: Modernism
    Clip 0:33
    My Kid Could Paint That: Modernism
    My Kid Could Paint That: Marla Collector Stuart Simpson
    Clip 1:33
    My Kid Could Paint That: Marla Collector Stuart Simpson
    My Kid Could Paint That: Marla Painting
    Clip 1:18
    My Kid Could Paint That: Marla Painting

    Photos14

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    + 8
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    Top cast14

    Edit
    Marla Olmstead
    • Self
    Laura Olmstead
    • Self
    Mark Olmstead
    • Self
    Amir Bar-Lev
    Amir Bar-Lev
    • Self
    Anthony Brunelli
    • Self
    Elizabeth Cohen
    • Self
    Jonathan Crosby
      Ron Curtis Jr.
        Michael Kimmelman
        • Self
        Zane Olmstead
        • Self
        Celeste Russi
        Celeste Russi
          Tara Sands
          Tara Sands
            Stuart Simpson
            • Self
            Jackie Wescott
            • Self
            • Director
              • Amir Bar-Lev
            • All cast & crew
            • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

            User reviews32

            7.13.5K
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            Featured reviews

            10ccthemovieman-1

            Extremely Thought-Provoking (Plus My Two Cents)

            This documentary is outstanding in its capacity to make the viewer think. I'm sorry there are so few reviews of this here at IMDb because I would truly be interested in reading what other people have to say about this film. This is one of those stories, almost like a mystery, where you are left deciding on your own questions like "was this the real deal or was/is this a sham?" and "did this little girl do the paintings all my herself or did her dad embellish them?"

            In 2004, four-year-old Marla Olmstead of Binghamton, New York, took the art world by storm. After an article by a Binghamton reporter, the New York Times picked up on it and, before you knew it, the little kid was a big celebrity. Her pieces were being sold for big bucks with much bigger profits on the way. Then, 60 Minutes did an expose raising doubts about whether she was on her own in this artwork. She went from child star to fraud, but then climbed back. All of this - and more - is documented on film by another guy, Amir Bar-Lev, who spent thousands of hours inside the Olmstead house interviewing and photographing the family. They hoped and assumed he'd be on their side, vindicating their daughter and themselves.

            For those who found this story fascinating, I cannot recommend enough that you also watch the 35-minute behind-the-scenes bonus feature on the DVD called "Back To Binghamton." It was done last year, a few years after all the controversy. If you didn't have enough opinions after watching the main feature, you will after watching this "extra." It is extremely enlightening.

            As a fellow reviewer, "tkelly-20" did here, I am going to add my "two cents." In a nutshell, here's how I viewed these people.

            THE REPORTER - The only totally honest and common-sense person, perhaps, in the whole story is Elizabeth Cohen. As she states, this is a story about adults, not the child artist. She regrets ever doing the story and beginning the whole mess. I don't blame her.

            THE PARENTS- If ever I've seen a person guilty on looks and body language alone, it has to be Marla's father, "Mark," who comes across as very shifty and as believable as a used car salesman. This guy, who is still bitter over the fact he never got his glory as a pro quarterback in the NFL, apparently will gladly take fame through his daughter. There is enough "evidence" here that he "polished" her artwork. The only legitimate defense he has is that the kid - who is honest like all real youngsters - hasn't said her daddy finished some of the paintings. Then again, the filmmaker didn't have the nerve, or thought it was inappropriate, to ask her.

            Marla's mother, meanwhile, comes across as more sincere and innocent.....but she isn't. I think she knows what's going on but, perhaps, is caught in the middle, covering for her husband trying to protect her daughter. The most telling thing about her was in the bonus feature when she quickly withdrew her hand when her husband was going to hold it. She wants nothing to do with this guy - that's obvious. This marriage looks like a business arrangement all the way with greed and lust for fame empowering both of these parents. The both say they don't like all this publicity but they keep allowing themselves and their two little kids to be filmed day and night! They obviously relish this limelight, and it's disgusting. (I hope I'm wrong about this. I want to believe this family.)

            THE ART WORLD - Gullible, pretentious and extremely prideful - that describes most of the "art people" in here, particularly art dealer Tony Brunelli. He, and others, have a pride problem in that they don't want to admit the Olmstead family has duped them from the start. Only one artist that I recall, another lady from Binghamton, who was shown on the bonus feature, told it straight and direct that she didn't believe any of this was legit. The worst pompous ass was - no surprise - the local college professor, who literally sounded insane. The world of art, unfortunately, is filled with phonies who will foist anything on the public if they can make a buck. At the same time, they will look you in the eye and honestly tell you something is "art," like the neon sign in this movie that just has the words - "F--k" on it. That's "art," to these people. Sad that little Marla is exposed to this kind of thing.

            THE PRODUCER & DIRECTOR - Like all of us, it's obvious Bar-Lev wanted to believe this family but the more he filmed and the more he interviewed, the more suspect this whole thing was, and at least he had the guts to tell the Olmstead parents his feelings at the end. They wanted a PR piece and now are upset at him. They shouldn't be; they should be grateful he didn't include a lot of things I saw in the out-takes, which really make them look like con men.

            Overall, this is a very disturbing story and one which invites a lot of discussion. In that respect, Bar-Lev is to be congratulated for making a movie which has so much impact and room for debate.
            8zetes

            An average documentary that excels because of an interesting subject

            Not a particularly well done documentary – the director doesn't get good enough footage to assemble a "complete" documentary, and it feels a little sloppy in the end. But Bar-Lev, whose second feature documentary this is, was lucky enough to chance upon an controversy that engages the audience nicely. I've certainly been thinking about it a lot for the past couple of days. The film is about a four year-old artist, Marla Olmstead, who took the art world by storm in 2005 with her amazingly sophisticated and beautiful abstract paintings. Marla's output produced a good $200,000 between '05 and '06. Bar-Lev wanted to document this child prodigy, but in the middle of his time spent with the family, the infotainment show 20/20, just one of a host of television news shows that covered the story, broke the angle that Marla's father, an amateur painter himself, may have coached the girl. All Hell breaks loose, the parents become pariahs, and they look to Bar-Lev as a possible savior. Unfortunately for them, Bar-Lev, who all the time has been trying and failing to get film of Marla painting one of her "masterpieces", is swayed by 20/20. It's a lot of fun to look at the evidence provided, to try to read the body language of the parents and try to read between the lines with them. You also have the issue about whether Marla herself was being exploited, which can raise a lot of debate. The film also works as an exploration of modern and abstract art. I myself am a fan of it, and I think there have been plenty of truly beautiful works of non-representational art. But, yeah, there are definitely paintings, some on display at an art auction going for millions of dollars in this film, where even I think the title of the documentary puts it perfectly. Most people are far less accepting than I. The film shows just how much the genre sticks in the craw of the general American public, and, in a sequence where the parents share a host of nasty e-mails with Bar-Lev, many seem just as angry that any of these paintings sold in the first place as they do that the paintings may be a sham. Even the 20/20 segment angles itself as an attack on non-representational art. Also featured are clips of a John Stossel news documentary about abstract art that I remember seeing a while back that really got my goat and has literally been making me angry for years now. Like many documentaries, the film benefits greatly from its DVD extras, which include a 30+ minute followup (which actually caused me to lose some sympathy for the parents; I seemed to be one of the few people who watched this movie and sympathized with them), and a great 15+ minute defense of abstract art by New York Times art critic Michael Kimmelman.
            10tkelly-20

            Great mystery movie + my guess of who's really painting

            This is an exceptional movie that provides the evidence and leaves it to each viewer to decide the core mystery.

            Does 4 year old Marla Olmstead paint her own modern art or is she being used by the adults around her? The documentary benefits from having begun before the 60 Minutes coverage, when the authenticity of Marla's work is unquestioned. The Olmsteads are a beautiful and loving family with two marvelous kids.

            The filmmaker does a great job taking us inside their world as fame descends upon Marla. Then things really heat up when the 60 Minutes piece breaks- and the cameras are rolling on the parents as it airs.

            The film does not decide for you but presents the evidence evenly, making it for me one of the most entertaining recent films.

            My guess of who's really painting- The mother seems too sincere to be lying but dad appears a little shifty, and they say they work opposing shifts. The guy I suspect is really doctoring the paintings from childish to MOMA quality is the art gallery owner. There is a scene showing him doing hyper-realistic painting and he is clearly a great artist, but it also seems he may have a chip on his shoulder that he has not been recognized as a talent. They say in the movie that it's always the two men against the mother when it comes to making decisions about Marla's career, so I suspect these two are working together for the substantial financial rewards, while making it easy and technically true for Dad to say that he doesn't do the painting.

            It will be interesting to see how Marla progresses artistically as she gets older and is no longer under her parent's or art dealer's control. She is certainly an engaging young girl and her story in fifteen years is potentially the subject of another film.

            No matter who you choose to believe, this documentary is top notch.
            bob the moo

            An interesting film but loses focus in the second half

            A new sensation has arrived in the modern art world – what started out as paintings sold for a few hundred dollars in a local restaurant has seen the artist garner national and international press coverage, well-selling shows in New York and comparisons to the world of classics. Thing is, the artist is a four year old girl called Marla, who apparently is painting these oils without help from either parent – who are both quite taken aback by the interest and profitability of their daughter. Filmmaker Amir Bar-Lev spends hundreds of hours with the family, from the rise to fame into the period where Marla's work comes under question.

            It was a fellow reviewer that mentioned this documentary to me a while back and when I saw it on television recently I decided to check it out. For the first half of the film I was catching up with the story as I had never seen or heard anything about this little girl before. To those already familiar with her then I suspect the first half of the film will not that that engaging but for me I found it interesting. Via the media coverage Bar-Lev is able to put questions like "what is art?" on the table even if he personally doesn't do much with them. The problem comes in the second part of the film because it is here where an interesting "last segment on the news" story gets more complex. Questions are asked and the answers are unconvincing – with limited evidence to silence the doubts. Nothing is ever conclusive and Bar-Lev cannot do a "Theroux" and coax anything out of the parents of value. I still found it interesting because the paintings are hard to believe and I was starting to wonder myself – particularly when you see Marla actually painting herself and they do look more like kid's stuff than the impressive creations on sale. But Bar-Lev doesn't seem sure what to do with this and as a result the film stutters to an unsteady conclusion where really it needed to be conclusive – even if that conclusion is inconclusive (if you see what I mean).

            As it is though, this documentary is interesting and it is only a shame that someone more able could have had the access Bar-Lev did, just to see how it could have turned out rather than how it did.
            9ArizWldcat

            Well Done Documentary

            We were very fortunate to have the opportunity to see this film at Sundance 2007. The filmmaker attended the (Salt Lake City) screening we went to, and graciously answered a lot of questions audience members had about it. As you can tell from the title and the plot summary, this was about a little 4 year old who seems to have a lot of talent for modern art. On the surface, there are a lot of questions raised about the nature of modern art, among other things, and that in itself would have made an interesting documentary. Refreshingly, about half way through the making of the documentary, 60 minutes did a story about this child and the result of that story changed the course of the documentary as well. I loved the way the filmmaker raised questions that he didn't answer...because he truly didn't know the answers. This was thoughtful and well done, and a thoroughly enjoyable filmgoing experience! I hope this has a measure of success.

            Storyline

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            Did you know

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            • Quotes

              Amir Bar-Lev: [when Laura starts crying on camera on being doubted] I'm sorry that I brought this into your house.

              Laura Olmstead: [bitterly] It's documentary gold.

            • Connections
              Featured in Siskel & Ebert: Elizabeth: The Golden Age/Lars and the Real Girl/Sleuth/We Own the Night/My Kid Could Paint That (2007)
            • Soundtracks
              Strange Things Happen Everyday
              Written by Sister Rosetta Tharpe

              Performed by Sister Rosetta Tharpe

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            Details

            Edit
            • Release date
              • December 14, 2007 (United Kingdom)
            • Countries of origin
              • United States
              • United Kingdom
            • Languages
              • English
              • Mandarin
            • Also known as
              • Benim Çocuğum Başarabilir
            • Filming locations
              • Binghamton, New York, USA
            • Production companies
              • A&E IndieFilms
              • Axis Films International
              • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
            • See more company credits at IMDbPro

            Box office

            Edit
            • Gross US & Canada
              • $231,574
            • Opening weekend US & Canada
              • $26,290
              • Oct 7, 2007
            • Gross worldwide
              • $258,316
            See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

            Tech specs

            Edit
            • Runtime
              • 1h 22m(82 min)
            • Color
              • Color
            • Sound mix
              • Dolby Digital
            • Aspect ratio
              • 1.85 : 1

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