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2 oeuvres 177 utilisateurs 5 critiques

Critiques

Andrea James, Danny Burstein, Elizabeth Pe, Felicity Huffman, Maurice Orozco; Director - Duncan Tucker

The first film by Duncan Tucker, Transamerica stars Felicity Huffman as a pre-operative transsexual named Bree (whose given name was Stanley). One week before going under the knife, Bree learns that she fathered a boy who is now 17 and is in trouble with the law. Bree would like to ignore this information, but is forced to meet the young man, Toby (played by Kevin Zegers), by her analyst Margaret (Elizabeth Peña), who will not allow the surgery to happen unless Bree meets him and confronts this aspect of her past. Upon meeting, the son believes that Bree is simply a do-gooder. She buys a car and the two road-trip back to her home in Los Angeles, Bree all the while attempting to keep from Toby the truth of the situation.
1 voter
Signalé
OasisJax_GLBT_Center | 4 autres critiques | Jun 23, 2011 |
Genialer Film mit Felicitas Huff (Sex in the City) , die die Hauptrolle der transsexuellen Frau souverän meistert
 
Signalé
femref | 4 autres critiques | Apr 6, 2010 |
Felicity Huffman
 
Signalé
studlybookworm | 4 autres critiques | Sep 14, 2015 |
2005 Academy Award Nominee
Best Actress Felicity Huffman
 
Signalé
UVM_OSCR_ONEARTH | 4 autres critiques | Mar 29, 2013 |
Review: Felicity Huffman deserves every award she's received for her outstanding performance in Transamerica, a small but rich movie about Bree--formerly Stanley--a pre-operative male-to-female transexual awaiting gender-reassignment surgery who learns she has a wayward teenage son named Toby. When her therapist (Elizabeth Peña, Jacob's Ladder) strongarms Bree into facing her past, she bails Toby (Kevin Zegers, Dawn of the Dead) out of jail and they end up on a road trip across the country. Such a premise could feel forced, but the script and performances make it persuasive and natural. Bree wrestles with discomfort and compassion as she learns about Toby's own troubles, even while her own grow worse when she's forced to ask for help from her hostile parents (the superb Fionnula Flanagan, The Others, and Burt Young, Rocky). Transamerica doesn't push for any great catharsis, but instead slowly peels away the layers of Bree's defenses, laying bare her basic struggle for respect and a chance at happiness. In many ways it's a showy role, but Huffman (Desperate Housewives) keeps her acting simple, direct, and thoroughly compelling. --Bret Fetzer for Amazon.com
 
Signalé
river_city_gems | 4 autres critiques | May 14, 2010 |