I love both indie and big budget "Slow Cinema" - films that are quiet, contemplative, moody, meditative, often with little dialogue (First Cow, Return to Dust, Bull, The Piano, Barry Lyndon, McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Days of Heaven readily come to mind). These style characteristics are perfectly fine with me, as long as I get a slice of life that's insightful, moves me and am compelled to finish watching. I don't like to give a bad review to a filmmaker's feature debut, but Sunnyland for me was a slow and very painful BORE. I forced myself to finish watching out of respect for the effort but was never rewarded with any glimmer of depth, insight or sadly, even empathy. I was hoping for something close to the brilliance of Sean Baker's The Florida Project but this film didn't even come close. I can't come up with any reason to recommend it.