Transamerica (2005) Poster

(2005)

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8/10
Two for the road
jotix10026 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Bree Osbourne has been a woman trapped in a man's body all her life. She has come to the decision that will change her forever and perhaps live a happier life, than the one she has led up to that moment when we meet her. Unfortunately for her, fate intervenes in a way she didn't even planned upon.

Duncan Tucker, the director and writer of "Transamerica", takes a difficult subject and expanded on it. This is not exactly what any Hollywood films dare to present to a general audience since it deals with a frank approach to a subject that is not commonly seen treated so honestly and with so much integrity. Mr. Tucker shows a respectful restraint in the way he shows his story that is never shocking, or in one's face.

"Transamerica" is basically a road movie. It takes us to New York, first, where Bree has come to bail out the son, Toby, she never knew about, but who appears to be a real person, and he stands in the way, since Toby, the young man, is suddenly her responsibility and she must face the consequences. "Transamerica" is a cross country trip where two people get to spend some time together as they travel this vast country from New York to Los Angeles.

Toby, a male hustler working the streets of Manhattan, questions Bree's motives because he doesn't want any part of what she proposes to him. First, a stop to see his step-father is something he would rather not do. He doesn't have any happy memories of a man that has abused him sexually while he lived at home. Toby, for all his street smarts, evidently doesn't even guess what Bree is really like until an incident where he discovers the truth.

"Transamerica" is a film about discoveries. Bree is at first horrified when she is told about Toby. Little by little, her instincts start smoothing things over, until she accepts the teen ager as a part of herself. The relationship between them flourish along the highways where they are seen traveling and make them come closer together, as they should.

The best thing to see the film is because of the wonderful job Felicity Huffman does in her portrayal of Bree. The actress disappears in the role in ways one couldn't imagine. The mannerisms of the trans gender woman are captured almost effortless by Ms. Huffman, who carries the film on her shoulders and runs away with it. Her performance is nothing but perfection.

Kevin Zegers plays Toby, the son Bree knew nothing about. It's a credit to this young actor to blend perfectly with the more experienced Ms. Huffman and making this young man true to life. The supporting playing by Fionnula Flanagan, Burt Young, Elizabeth Pena, and Graham Greene, among others, compliment the film well.

The credit for presenting this film belongs to the courage of Duncan Tucker, who wrote a beautiful screen play and then directed with love and understanding for a thorny subject.
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8/10
A First Class Movie
yaaah_6915 November 2011
I usually avoid Transsexual movies as they make me uncomfortable ! That's why I avoided the movie "Transamerica" when it came out . But being a movie fan I kept reading reviews that were saying how great the movie was and how great the actors were . So I finally rented the movie in 2011 and viewed it for the first time . I had seen 'The Angry Inch' and it did nothing for me . Then I saw "A Soldiers Girl" and that movie stuck with me but it was violent . Then I viewed Transamerica and was at last entertained . Felicity Huffman , was an Oscar's performance to say the least and she did win that award . She was amazing and I do not think a male playing the role could have carried it off as well . All the actors were 100 percent human and able to reach the audience ! Kevin Segers is a bright spot in the movie as Toby , Bree's son that she did not know she had. Kevin's performance was nothing short of Oscar material , which he should have won something . There are a lot of great up and coming actors from Canada . And if it were not for the Canadians we would not have movies like this , and "The Barbarian Invasion''s . Hollywood just cannot come out of the closet long enough to make a movie in this genre , let alone in off the wall subjects. I gave this welcome flick 8 stars out of 10 . ciao yaaah69
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8/10
On the Road Again
moutonbear2521 January 2006
TRANSAMERICA Written & Directed by Duncan Tucker

A perky spokesperson is on the television. "This is the voice I want to use," she repeats, staring directly into the camera. Bree Osbourne (Felicity Huffman) watches this instructional tape, using it as yet one more step to ultimately eliminate every trace of Stanley Schupack, the man she once was and biologically still is, or at least she still will be for the next week. Bree is a pre-operation, male-to-female transsexual with a definite distaste for all things supposedly male. This means anything vulgar or classless and even her penis. She would much rather embrace all that is delicate, artistic, and insightful. These conscious decisions show gender as a performance, a calculated choice to put forth the parts of you that you identify as more innately masculine or feminine in accordance with who you want to be. In Bree's case, the decisions she makes are often awkward and misplaced, from the jerkiness of her walk to her often difficult-to-process-how -she-rationalized-that-was-a-good-look- for-her ensembles. Despite that, the decisions she makes are her own and having made them and consequently sticking with them is more important than the decisions themselves. After all, she is about to make a much bigger decision that she will have to live with for the rest of her life

Just as Bree can almost feel the jarring cold of the surgical knife on her skin, she learns that her one sexual fumble with a woman back in college, when she was still Stanley, led to the birth of a child. (oh, those silly college experimentations.) That child, Toby (Kevin Zegers), has gotten himself arrested and sent to a juvenile detention unit up in New York City. In response, Bree's therapist will not sign off on her authorization to go ahead with the surgery if Bree refuses to confront this boy and her past. Upon meeting Toby, Bree learns that he hustles to earn a living and enjoys his hallucinogenics while he is still holding on to his dream of making it in the movies. He aims high but he's still a realist, acknowledging that his big future in the film industry will likely be in gay porn. From the looks of him in his undies, I dare say he's a pretty perceptive kid, not to mention a good shot at success. In the driver's seat we have a timid and awkward father who will soon be a mother but has not divulged this much to her son. In the passenger seat, we have an ambitious and bright young man who has lost his way without realizing. And thus begins the great transamerican road trip from New York City to Los Angeles. Bree's seemingly unsolicited act of kindness inspires Toby to be a better man and return that kindness to this stranger. This cycle continues along the way as we watch two people who are so acutely aware of the roles they portray to the world, shed their thick skins and take on new roles without even realizing they're doing it. One is trying to be heard right now and the other has tried for so long not to be seen. Yet on this cross country trek, they both leave these acts they're so used to aside and embrace their new selves as a mother who helps her child see his worth and a child who makes his mother feel more like a woman than any instructional videotape or hormone she's ever seen or taken.

Felicity Huffman knows how to play a reluctant mother. As the exhausted mother of four, Lynette Scavo on television's DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES, Huffman exhibits her strengths as an actress by playing Lynette as a woman who relies on her instincts. She is protective and fierce while still sensitive and nurturing. While her television character's hesitation comes from a lack of confidence in her abilities to embody one of life's most natural roles, her TRANSAMERICA film persona holds back for mostly selfish reasons. She has not felt like herself her entire life (The look of disgust on her face when a doctor asks how she feels about her penis hits hard for how quick and harsh a reaction it is). Having a problem son to deal with and eventually confront regarding his misconceived notions about his birth father is a direct obstacle that she had not counted on. This is her initial fear but Bree is actually terrified that she has no nurturing capabilities just like her television counterpart. It is only by spending time with her son that she comes to learn that she has much wisdom to impart upon him, that she was not ruined entirely by her parents or that she could stand to learn a thing or two from him as well.

The issue of control, having it in one's life or over one's self is a struggle for most but can be even more of an arduous challenge for marginalized people, like a transsexual person. He or she not only needs to ingest numerous hormones in order be more like the person they feel they are inside which is in complete contradiction to the body they've been given but they then have to deal with the ignorance and judgment that is given to them each time they put on their armor and walk outside their door. TRANSAMERICA is a film about learning how to incorporate the person you've always known yourself to be, the person you so desperately want to become and about healing the relationships with the people you meet and touch along the winding road that gets you there.
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9/10
People who might really exist
slabihoud18 October 2005
TRANSAMERICA is a film where you meet people who might really exist. And real people are not only great or terrible, they are mostly both. It is the acting and the dialog which makes all the difference. The film offers a blueprinted storyline of two people who don't know each other traveling together across the US, from NY to LA. Memories of MIDNIGHT RUN and RAIN MAN do come up once in a while. But still this is everything but a Hollywood product. The main character is a Transsexual named Bree, born as a man but living the past few years as a woman, only days before her operation which will definitely make her a woman. That subject and, the fact, that the role is played by an actress signifies a very different approach to the old gender questions. The film offers funny moments too, but never makes fun about a man, wanting to be a woman. The film is very subtle, and it is really a pity when it is finally over. It displays very well that great stories don't require great budgets to make great films! 9 out of 10!
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10/10
Adam At the Cusp of Eve
nycritic7 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
There will be people who on viewing this film by Duncan Tucker will find themselves repulsed by its nature, maybe fascinated a little, or trying to nit-pick the situations that develop at the second half. But for once, finally, like its sister film BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN, there is a film which doesn't use the transgendered person as the butt of a joke. At last a movie that humanizes the experience and makes it accessible to anyone who watches it regardless of gender preference.

I'd been anxious to watch TRANSAMERICA on the heels of having watched NORMAL on HBO which also dealt on the same subject: a man who comes out to himself as being trapped in the wrong sex. Both films skirt away from too much melodrama and treat the issue with the dignity that it deserves, with the difference that TRANSAMERICA veers off into flat-out comedy with Bree's arrival to her family's home but even that looks welcome in a story that could have become tedious despite its risky subject matter.

The story of Bree, formerly known as Stanley, who is "this close" to getting her lifelong dream of being a woman, except for a little problem: she has a son, now 17 years old, who's in jail, and she must come to terms with him before taking this final step. She's none too happy: this means opening the door back to her old life as a man and she's not about to do this. The kid is a total hindrance. So she decides to keep it a secret, bail him out, drive him to Los Angeles, and be done with him.

And that in short is the entire set-up of TRANSAMERICA. It's a road movie about two people involved in an uneasy relationship, but unlike many road movies, these are two real, conscious, breathing people who tell more about their lives than any flashback sequence. Toby, for instance, isn't just another teen with troubles but someone who dreams to meet his father, who doesn't want to go to his home town because of a hideous secret that lives there. His incursion into porn remains unexplained, but many pornstars have a history of some form of abuse and a need to be loved but an ingrained fear of rejection which is the main issue with Toby. He wants a father but wonders will he be rejected. Kevin Zegers plays Toby like a quieter, but still intense Leo DiCaprio.

Felicity Huffman, needless to say, has the meatier role. She seems to be adept in playing real people who have real stories to tell as in her turn as Lynette Scavo on "Desperate Housewives". Since not much is said about Bree (except that she, like Bree from the show as played by Marcia Cross is also a perfectionist if a dowdier one, a woman who obsesses over voice inflections and personal appearance and social decorum), everything is left to Huffman's body language and facial expressions. I kept wondering what it was that made her, as Stanley, veer off into what seems to be an underachieving life when she had it all. Since many transsexuals have gone this path -- leaving a life of "normalcy" and working odd jobs, trying to blend in or to live as a "stealth" -- it didn't surprise me when I saw that Bree was a waitress in a Mexican restaurant. Transsexuals for the majority live lonely lives, and unless they are in gender-tolerant cities, they won't be found in the corporate arena. Many of them go through incredible hardships and meet violent ends. Some thrive as performers, on the fringes of society, seen as "freaks" to be snickered at. That is what we as a society impose on them: a friendly alienation. Huffman manages to bring all that forth in the way she behaves among people -- even how she is in her own home, all practiced gestures and shy manners. She is her role, down to her private parts.

And bold, for showing them -- where most actresses over the age of forty would balk at a nude scene Huffman dives in, and even though it's short, because we've seen her with a fake penis on two occasions, it's fitting to see her as the woman she is portraying. Very, very daring without being exploitative.

TRANSAMERICA is more tolerant and compassionate than it seems at first. Like I stated, the film does not leer at her like a freak of nature but a real person, though she herself, her need for perfection, is the one to bring out the laughter. It may not eventually be awarded the Oscar for Best Actress but as of now it's going down in history as being a sensitive portrayal of a woman trying to make it in the world with her son.
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Brave, Funny and Sincere Road Movie
Chrysanthepop9 September 2007
'Transamerica' is mainly a road movie about a pre-operative transsexual Bree (Huffman), her unknowing son (Zegers) and their complex yet developing relationship. There are some brilliant shots of the vast American landscapes throughout the film. This is not a predominant social rights movie. It focuses more on the relationship between the two protagonists. It's about about individual acceptance rather than social approval. It's not a tragic piece either. In spite of involving a risky subject, Tucker cleverly gives a comic touch to his writing by balancing it with the drama without making any of it even slightly melodramatic.

Bree is just a couple of days away from fulfilling her dream of becoming a women when suddenly she receives an unexpected phone call saying that her son's in jail. Bree is reluctant and not too happy about facing her past but after taking her therapist Margaret she goes to New York and bails her son out of jail and decides to drive with him to L.A. During this trip they tell each other about their lives (the use of flashbacks has been cleverly avoided).

Felicity Huffman delivers a brave and fantastic performance of what she herself described as the role of a lifetime. She displays Bree with insecurity, pathos, fear, humour and growth which really makes one forget that they're actually looking at an actress act. Her use of non-verbal language is remarkable. While in the beginning the audience may feel that they're looking at an ugly freak, one can't help but love the character after the end credits have rolled. Kevin Zegers intensely underplays his part as Bree's son Toby and does a fine job. Elizabeth Pena, Graham Greene and Fionulla Flanagan stand out in smaller roles.

'Transamerica' is a wonderful sincere film about very real people. It's about a woman and her son surviving in a difficult world. Though many have described Huffman's performance to be of Oscar calibre, the Oscars have rewarded many non-deserving performances. It is definitely one of the most challenging performances and one that will be remembered in the history of cinema. A fine piece of cinema.
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7/10
An Amusing and Heartfelt Twist on the Cross-Country Mis-Matched Pair Genre
noralee5 December 2005
"Transamerica" follows the trajectory of the long tradition of road movies with opposites paired up on a voyage of self-discovery, with stops along the way to their pasts.

The gimmick here recalls "Broken Flowers"s trip when another biological father discovers a son. Here, it's not just that the person who produced the sperm is on the verge of transsexual completion that helps the film rise above various genre clichés (there was more than passing similarity to scenes from such films as "The Sure Thing," "Smoke Signals," and "Midnight Run" in debut writer/director Duncan Tucker's script, plus unfortunate throwback images of the south from "Deliverance" and way over-the-top dysfunctional families, and some Native American commentary on transsexuals coinciding with a convenient appearance by the ever estimable Graham Greene.)

As graphically embodied in two terrific performances, "Bree" (Felicity Huffman as née "Stanley") and the new-found son "Toby" have opposite relations to their bodies. Having felt like a stealth woman trapped in a man's body, "Bree" is naive to the pleasures of the flesh and is used to having to be wrapped up tight in her struggle to control normality that has impeded every part of her life.

"Toby" is an abused gay hustler who probably for good reason and profit assumes that people of either gender or those in-between are responding to him physically (and Kevin Zegers is such an unfettered, tousled Adonis that he is even more sensual than Joseph Gordon-Levitt's somewhat similar screwed-up kid in "Mysterious Skin").

Both have had only negative experiences with family, as we see along the way, and both have a lot to learn about the parent/child relationship and honesty.

While it makes it too easy for the audience's perception to have the transsexual be played by an actress (like Vanessa Redgrave as Renee Richards or Olympia Dukakis in "Tales of the City" or Famke Janssen on "Nip/Tuck" vs. Terence Stamp in "The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert") with only two momentary reversion lapses to masculine mannerisms played for laughs and revelation, at least for more realism "Bree" is not in the arts or some high-powered white-collar job.

There were a lot of chuckles throughout the film, but I was surprised that not all of the folks at the crowded opening weekend matinée of a very mixed gay and straight audience joined in. (Though the two guys next to me who had been discussing "Lord of the Rings" just before the film started were uproarious at "Toby"s analysis of the gay sub-text in that story.) It was a cheap shot for easy laughs to have "Bree" be half-Jewish.

While I thought it was for symbolism that the two have a key stop-over in Phoenix, it turns out that was filmed at the director's parents' house in Arizona. I presume the kid's concluding black cowboy hat and blond hair is a bit of an homage to "Midnight Cowboy."

The soundtrack selections are excellent reflections of the environments the characters are in, from Latin in California, to hip hop in New York to a lovely range of Southern country and gospel, moving through Texas with a Lucinda Williams track, Native American in New Mexico, with a beautiful new Dolly Parton song over the credits that should get an Oscar nomination.
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10/10
Felicity Huffman's wry performance is Oscar quality
bliss_s10 August 2005
I first saw Transamerica as the closing film for the Frameline film festival in San Francisco where it won the "The Frameline Audience Award for Best Feature". The film was obviously a labor of love. Duncan Tucker wrote, directed and wisely cast Felicity Huffman as Bree (before she had been cast as a "desperate housewife"). Huffman's husband William Macy was executive producer.

The plot line is certainly the tried and true formula of the transformational road trip, yet the irony of Bree's concurrent sexual transformation freshens a story that could easily have been cliché. Kevin Zegers and the rest of the supporting cast are superb, but Huffman's characterization of Bree is Oscar caliber.

See Transamerica! It's not tragic like "Boys Don't Cry". It's not about sexuality, fetish, or camp. It's a movie about otherness, transformation, family, and ultimately acceptance. Felicity Huffman's Golden Globe winning and Oscar nominated performance is absolutely astounding. Her acting skill fills Bree with insecurity, pathos, warmth, humor, and growth which ultimately transforms the audience's involvement from freak show curiosity to empathy and identification.

Thankfully the Weinstein brothers recognized just how outstandingly strong this performance is and decided that Transamerica would be one of the first films they would choose to distribute after their great success at Miramax.

I saw this movie again during it's limited distribution, again in general distribution and now own the DVD. Each time I've watched it I find even more to like. Transamerica is an indie classic.
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7/10
Good effort minus the stereotypes and clichés
AlsExGal13 December 2016
This film features an Oscar-nominated performance by Felicity Huffman and was produced by Huffman's husband, William H. Macy.

A woman in the midst of her gender transition (man to woman) is denied permission for the ultimate surgery until she has come to terms with her son (Kevin Zegers), who has just rung up out of nowhere -- she didn't know she fathered a son during some youthful fling.

She leaves California for the East Coast, to get her gorgeous young son out of jail, without telling him she's his father. They drive across America, meet people, have adventures, get on each other's nerves. Every time they get in to the car, some annoying country music plays. Very old fashioned.

Although there is merit here, and the film is moderately interesting, the stereotypes are annoying. One is sympathetic to someone who is transitioning, but does the transition need to be to a woman who must dress in pink and says things like, "Don't talk like that to a lady!" There's lots of simpering going on. OK -- she has one good line: "I'm a transsexual, not a transvestite." For the son's part, he's been jailed for working as a rent boy. Does he have to seem so depressed when he turns a trick? And Huffman's mother, played by Fionnulla Flanagan, is the most awful mother stereotype of all, who can't deal with the fact that her son is becoming a woman until she suddenly does deal with it.

This movie deals sympathetically with an important issue; but did they have to throw every cliché in the book at it? And the worst cliché of all: Lying is the worst sin. And if you are technically a male, never deny it, particularly to your son (although he doesn't know he's her son at that point, he just thinks she's some nice religious lady), because he'll get really, really upset, but not because of the male genitals, but because you lied to him.

How does this all work out? Does it all work out? Watch and find out. Still I'd recommend it because it does try and deal with a complex subject that isn't that well understood now and probably much less so when this film was made over a decade ago.
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9/10
Excellent real-life comedy/drama from a different point of view
lrapoport27 April 2005
I saw Transamerica last night at the Tribeca Film Festival and absolutely loved it. I was concerned beforehand that I would not be able to relate to the characters, but that turned out not to be a problem. The acting of Felicity Huffman and Kevin Zegers is done with so much sincerity that I quickly came to care about their characters. Ms. Huffman's performance is one of the best I have seen. Having not seen any of her television or movies, I did not know anything about her. In fact, I thought that she was truly a man playing the part of the transsexual woman. The script was always believable and allowed Ms. Huffman to show some wry humor. The writer/director Duncan Tucker was there to make a few comments answer questions. The only problem is that the film has not yet been picked up by a distributor so if you want to see it (and you should) you may have to find a film festival somewhere.
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7/10
A courageous variation on an archetype; Poignant and sincere.
Nightscream13 June 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Well, now HERE'S a premise that you can't exactly say you've seen loads of times before!

In this independent drama-with-comedic moments, Felicity Huffman from "Desperate Housewives" plays Bree (née Stanley), a waitress, a born-again Christian, and a male-to-female transsexual days away from her final operation that will complete her gender reassignment. She suddenly finds out that she has a biological son, Toby, in a New York City jail that she never knew she had, and after going there to bail him out under the guise that she's a missionary, he convinces her to take him with her to L.A. Toby, it turns out, is a junkie and a gay prostitute, and he hopes to find a future in acting in L.A. Bree, on the other hand, is stuffy, puritanistic, and closed. She would just as soon have nothing to do with Toby, seeing no connection between the two of them, and even tries to drop him off at his stepfather's. When that turns disastrous, she decides to take him with her, spending the journey correcting his incorrect grammar, forbidding smoking in her car, and doing anything she can to not only hide the truth of their biological relationship, but of her "transitional" status, while listening to things his mother told him about his biological father, who he says is half Native American (Bree is actually half Jewish).

Huffman portrays Bree not as a stereotype or caricature, but as a profoundly unhappy woman uncomfortable in her own skin, in her own (estranged) family, and in her own life. She can't wait to become fully a woman, and comes across as almost tragic, as her journey with Toby places in her situations where she is unable to fully hide her secrets. One exchange in the beginning of the film when she is being interviewed for her psychological status prior to her surgery (done from memory):

Interviewer: "How do you feel about your penis?" Bree: "I hate it. I think it's disgusting. I don't really like to look at it." Interviewer: "What about your friends?" Bree: "They don't like it either."

Toby, for his part, couldn't care less if she were a transsexual. After all he's seen and done, he accepts Bree for who and what she is, irritated not at her transsexual status, but at her deception and hypocrisy. A born-again Christian, she disparages a group of transsexuals that she and Toby encounter in order to cover up her own secret, but Toby thinks they're OK people.

When Bree sees her parents for the for the first time after a long estrangement, her devout mother refuses to accept her new life, but agrees to keep the fact that she's Toby's father from the young man.

I found the movie to be courageous in the way it takes an honest look at a small segment of the population who don't often get screen time in our society, and how portrays with irony the way Bree, a born-again Christian, feels more compelled to hide secrets about herself than Toby, who is a drug use, prostitute and hustler. Distant from each other at first, Bree by the time her character arc has reached its climax, has realized how much she is connected to her son, and how her reassignment surgery may not give her as much happiness as she once thought.

As another reviewer noted:

"Felicity Huffman, won Best Actress at the Tribeca Film Festival for her role in this film, portrays Bree with every nuance of a pre-operative male-to-female transsexual without transgression, from the octave of her voice to the almost forced hyper-femininity. Kevin Zegers holds his own as Toby, playing the character's tough façade alongside vulnerability and adolescent confusion. Laced with humor and poignant moments, Transamerica transcends the genres it incorporates due to writer/director Duncan Tucker's engaging script and meticulous direction. The film ultimately comes together as the story of two people in transition who are used to relying on themselves and have not yet realized that it sometimes takes a stranger to help you move on to the next place."

The movie is currently scheduled for September release, no doubt to take advantage of Oscar season, and if marketed right, I think we could be seeing a nomination for Huffman.

(It should be noted that this film is not for children, as it contains mature subject matter, and two shots of full-frontal male (well, one male and one transsexual) nudity, one of which is obscured by distance and the quickness of the shot, the other of which is slightly obscured by nighttime shadows.)
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9/10
Really not what I expected! Absolutely wonderful film.
Slayyeretta13 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I only saw this movie because I've really grown to like Felicity Huffman in Desperate Housewives and because of the Oscar buzz surrounding it. I was expecting a strange, crazy movie about characters I could never relate to, filled with sex and stereotypes, as are most movies I've seen/heard about relating to either gay or transsexual people. Instead, this movie was just amazing. Really thought-provoking, wonderfully acted by Felicity and by Kevin Zegers. This movie was about 2 characters who most people would not relate to in theory, but as the movie develops, you see that they are just like every one of us, going through the exact same things. The movie went into deep fundamental issues that are really part of what everyone goes through in life. Growing up, finding out who you really are, trying to be happy, and making a ton of mistakes along the way.

In the end, Bree just wants to feel comfortable in her own skin and she wants the respect of her parents. I really forgot that I was watching an actress playing a man playing a woman. You just get sucked into this movie. When it ended, I actually stared at the screen for a few seconds, thinking oh man is this it? I wanted more! I found Toby to be a very interesting character. You have a 17 year old boy, whose mother committed suicide, whose step-father molested him, who is a junkie, a male prostitute, but is also interested in girls and walks around with a stuffed animal from his childhood. He seems like a very very confused teenager - confused about who he is and about what he wants. He just does what people want him to. That seems to be how he gets by in life. But then you see another side of him. He seems like a good person, intelligent, who wants to have a good life but has never had any real support to do that. If you met him, you wouldn't even imagine the kind of background he has had and how he makes a living. He's a very attractive guy, who unfortunately seems to think that sex is all he has to offer.

I think some of the big lessons to learn from this movie are that you can't judge people based on physical appearances or based on things you really aren't familiar with (such as trans-gendered people). We are all just human in the end, and we all have the same emotions, we all just want to be happy, to love someone, and to be loved. I was very happy and pleasantly surprised to see in this movie that Bree's changes are not related at all to sex. And the love she is looking for is from her family. Her only sexual experience was in college with Toby's mom. She has never been with a man. And I thought it was good and refreshing to see that her surgery and everything she goes through has nothing to do with any of that. It's just about her. Like she told her mom, "you never had a son." I'm honestly not extremely familiar with trans-gendered people, but I have heard that people like Bree say that they have always been a woman, just in the wrong body. And when you hear something like that, your natural reaction is to think that that person is crazy. But this movie made me feel differently about the whole thing. Because I felt like what was really emphasized was that this person is unhappy as they are. Bree thinks that a surgery will cure all of her problems. But it really doesn't. You can tell that she's more comfortable in her skin after the surgery. She even dresses much better. But she still has a long way to go to feel good about herself, gain confidence, and figure out what she wants to do in life. It's really a coming of age story for both Bree and Toby. Bree goes through similar emotions that teenagers go through. And she is now in her 40's, but her life is only now really kicking into gear.

In this movie, you have two lost souls who are used to being independent but also unhappy. They end up finding out that they are father and son, and they realize how much a bond like that is missing from their lives. I really with there were a sequel to this movie because I really care about these characters now.

I hope Felicity wins the Oscar. She definitely deserves it! Sorry for rambling so much, but I just saw the movie, and it really gets your brain working :) I highly recommend it to anyone and everyone. You will relate to it, and you will enjoy it.
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7/10
Transamerica
film_riot16 October 2007
Warning: Spoilers
The feature film debut by writer-director Duncan Tucker. He made a classic feelgood-movie about a character that has to come to terms with herself. In addition it's also a road movie, a very American genre, understandably if you consider the scenic beauty in many parts of the United States. And like in every road movie the road is also a metaphor for the way that one or more characters have to go until they can reach their inner destiny. "Transamerica" also features thematically conditioned social commitment and breaks a taboo in seriously talking about a group of people that practically doesn't exist in media. For some of the characters it would have been good if they weren't as cut and dried, but the main lines in the movie all work and for that it was a pleasant surprise. Felicity Huffman's performance is very well and worth the praise she received for it. It is really remarkable how well she cares this film, that depends to a big part on her being believable.
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3/10
Too many errors
MidtownBettie2 May 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I am a transgendered woman who is a lesbian and who has been approved for Sex Reassignment Surgery ("SRS") and I found this movie very irritating. It had potential and it was quite good in parts. However, it had errors that perpetuate misconceptions that often make life difficult for transgendered women in transition. Avoiding those errors would only have needed professional diligence on the part of the scriptwriters. The story would not have been affected. Thus professionalism must have been absent.

First, to be transgendered is not the same as to be transsexual. Yet even the DVD box, let alone the script, refers to Bree as a "transsexual woman". That's not true as far as anything in the movie reveals. She is evidently a transgendered woman, her male body doesn't match her female self-identity, but there is no indication that her sexuality and its orientation have changed. So it's silly and wrong to call her transsexual.

Second, she is on hormones, taking oestrogen. If one is on a path to SRS, then oestrogen is best avoided if possible. It reduces what the surgeon can work with. If taking oestrogen anyway, one must stop several weeks before surgery to lessen the risk of blood clots.

Third, Bree says, "It's genetic." No, it's not that simple. Gender is established during the first three years of life. Usually the result is not a mismatch with the body. Sometimes it is a mismatch. More often than not a strong, perhaps primary, contributing cause of a gender to body mismatch is environment.

Fourth, after the first operation it is as if that's it. All over. It isn't. Even if the first operation, the vaginoplasty, is so successful that there are no adjustments, some months later, when that is healed, then there is labiaplasty. No mention is made of this, which is unfair, idealistic, misleading, maybe even lazy, simplification.

And there were other implausibilities. For example, although Ms. Huffman's acting was good, her direction was not. That's the only reason I can think of for occasions when Bree affected femininity in an almost cartoonish, Tootsie-like way. Also, if she was taking hormones, her male organ would not have been as prominent as shown. On that matter, even without hormones, the corsetry was laughable. Ordinary "firm-control" briefs are more than adequate for avoiding a "boy bump" in any snug clothing situation.

And then her family. Unbelievable scenes. Literally incredible to the point of comedy, whereas a skillful, realistic depiction could have been useful. Instead, one's disrespect for the filmmakers was confirmed and deepened.

I could go on, but won't. There is neither time nor space.

What was the point of the movie? If it was to use drama to depict and support what it is like to be a transgendered woman, then, thank you, nice try, but not a very helpful try because the errors left a lot of misconceptions intact.

The story? Well, that was so weak that it was almost invisible. So no comment.

Pity. This movie's intentions, whatever they were, were presumably good. But it failed.
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9/10
TRANSAMERICA: Dare 2 Be Different & Win Over The Audience
screenwriter-142 December 2005
The journey Ms. Huffman takes in TRANSAMERICA is one in which many will identify with in needing to become the person you really should be. Ms. Huffman's performance as a "man into a woman" played by a woman is a miracle and a triumphant film performance that an audience should see to fully understand the brilliance of what an actor can transform on film, as well as for the warm, intelligent character, Bree, becomes on the screen.

Please, give Felicity Huffman the Oscar NOW!!! And, The young, brilliant actor, Kevin Zegers, as Toby, commands the role as Bree's son in TRANSAMERICA with just as painful a journey as Bree in wanting to have a better life for himself. Toby and Bree are two soul mates waiting to discover one another, ironically as father and son,as this film brings to a wonderful conclusion.

TRANSAMERICA is a film that should be seen to be understood; a film that presents two characters, father and son, who take a journey together that will change their lives forever. When the Award season commences, Felicity Huffman and Kevin Zegers should be on the stage to receive awards for characters that warm your heart and take you back in time with questions on your own life's directions.
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10/10
Incredible movie - Great performances
ryan-60524 October 2005
Huffman did a terrific job of making me forget a "star" was doing the title role. Her performance was incredibly authentic. You could just feel the uncomfortableness of Bree as we see her start her journey (both figuratively and literally) and gets to know the son she never knew she had.

Moments of this movie had me laughing out loud. Others brought me near tears. If you see one movie this year, this should be it. It is movies like this that give me hope that some people still care about quality film-making.

A little gossip: the director said that Huffman enthusiastically agreed to do this film and then when it was almost time to start shooting, he found out she had to go to Hollywood in 3 months to shoot "some stupid pilot." Yes, THAT stupid pilot.
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An enjoyable and interesting film
swamprat_218 November 2011
Last week a family getting ready to move gave my wife and I a bag of books and a few films. One of the films was Transamerica. I glanced at the front and back and through "Hmmm, I didn't I know Mrs. H. was into weird movies". A few nights later my wife and I decided to give the film a try. The film was great, we're so tired of the same old Hollywood stuff, action, special effects, top dollar actors who could care less about the characters. The film captured us in the very beginning, we both empathized with Bree, understood her struggle, pain, and basic desire to be herself. The road trip was a great part of the film. I enjoyed the Calvin Manygoats and the meeting with her parents (the mom was great). I grew uncomfortable with Toby's desire to have sex with his biological father, as well as the tryst with the trucker, but this was an intergral part of the story and the film was very realistic. I learned a lot about the struggle and pain that these people have in life, it made me more accepting of their lives. I would recommend this film to anyone who enjoys a good story, exceptional acting, and good dialog. It's a very good film.
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6/10
A minor treat
moonspinner5521 March 2007
Felicity Huffman was probably very brave in taking on the role of a pre-operative male-to-female transsexual, however Huffman rarely comes off noble in this part--it isn't an overtly "courageous", actressy turn--and she's wonderful to watch. The film, a slight road-comedy/drama about eccentrics and family, isn't so much stifled by the medium-sized budget as it is by a lack of substantial story elements (it rests a bit too easily on its colorful vignettes). However, there's genuine feeling behind Huffman's plight, her desire to connect with a son she didn't realize she had--and yet keep him (and all serious issues) at bay. Huffman's "Bree" is a nervous ninny, a ridiculously well-spoken and educated creature who thinks that all good deeds reap a payback. The movie, written and directed by Duncan Tucker, is somewhat short on ambition, however this occasionally works to its advantage as the film doesn't preach to a non-converted audience nor does it condescend to outcasts. With beautiful soundtrack music and some very funny and touching sequences, it's a minor treat. **1/2 from ****
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9/10
A Touching Film with an Oscar-Worthy Performance
jhnnypanic4 May 2005
This was my favorite film of the Tribeca festival. Felicity Huffman's performance is incredible and grabs you from the first scene. It was a smart, poignant and funny film. Some of the characters are too thinly drawn, some of the humor too inappropriately broad but those were minor issues for me. Though rooted in some ways in standard plot devices, the transgender protagonist makes all the difference in the world. Which, in a way, is kind of the point -- how we view people's differences (with acceptance or disdain) says a lot about who we are. Of course, it played well here in New York City. But what about the rest of Bush's America? By the way, I was told that Lions Gate picked up the film for distribution.
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6/10
It had promise, but promises are meant to be broken.
KnowOne198815 January 2007
If your looking to open your eyes on sexual identity then this movie might have something for you. If your looking to learn more about trans-gender people then once again this movie might have something for you, but i would recommend Boy's Don't Cry over it any-day. The story line is thoughtful and pure. It's a tale of overcoming selfishness and lies, to find a solid ground. One that won't crumble under your feet so easily. The movie is about family, searching for acceptance and haunted pasts. It's about doing what's right not only for you , but for people you have just met. The movie is a simple concept, true. But an honest one full of complex characters. And at times it hits close to home with all thats happening under the radar behind the closed doors of America. The only problem i had with this movie is after awhile i lost attention. It dragged. The story slowed down when it needed to move the most. So, what this movie is not, it's not life changing, or cut out for someone wanting to walk away saying wow, that movie was astounding.
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9/10
Witty, touching, nearly perfect
Ric-728 December 2005
I have never seen Desperate Housewives, and before seeing this film, I had no idea of what actor or actress played the lead. As I watched the film, I thought that the actor was doing an outstanding job, and then later I thought that the actor must be an actual transsexual. After the film ended, my companion told me the lead was played by Felicity Huffman. A woman. From birth.

Having no advance knowledge of Ms. Huffman or her prior performances, but having had prior knowledge of transsexuals, I must say that she was absolutely convincing--a truly astonishing performance.

I don't want to slight the other actors and actresses, there wasn't a weak link in this ensemble. This was a thoroughly enjoyable film. It is not for children, but I think that most adults will not regret seeing it.
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6/10
Nicely Done, but Haven't We Been Here Before?
tohu12 November 2007
This movie is about a male to female trans-sexual and her troubled teenage son who drive together across the country, meeting assorted characters and getting in and out of a number of scrapes on the way to finding themselves - and each other.

Wait a minute... an LGBT-themed generation-gap 'road trip' movie? Haven't we been here before? For example, in 'Priscilla,' or 'To Wong Foo'? Well, yes. And frankly there isn't much here that is all that new. What 'Transamerica' does have going for it is some great performances. Other reviewers are rightly raving about the quality of Felicity Huffman's portrayal of the central figure. But I thought Kevin Zegers was no less striking as the teenager, and there are some good supporting turns as well, from the likes of Burt Young.

Good acting is always worth watching, so I'd recommend seeing this movie if you like this kind of thing. But the downside is that too many of the characters and situations are a little bit clichéd. It's nicely done, and its political message is subtly woven rather than rammed into your face. But at the end of the day, don't expect anything that you haven't seen before.
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9/10
Engaging Movie From the Very Start
eric26200319 June 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Felicity Huffman turns in one of the most complex and engaging performances I've seen in a long time as Sabrina "Bree" Osbourne, a transsexual who's down to her final stages of her final operation as she's about to lose the man jewels as she is finally rid of the horrid past she encountered when she was a man named Stanley. It's a misnomer to some who think that this is a goofy zany comedy film, or a preachy film about the trials and tribulations of becoming transsexual. It is a vulgar satire that uplifts the dramatic elements from the obstacles of the plot and the surprising outcomes that manifest at the principal elements as the movie progresses.

In his directorial debut, Duncan Tucker has took on the classic road movie to a new direction that pits Bree and her re-acquaintance with the son she only once fathered. Toby is a juvenile homeless kid who is the biological son of the former Stanley who was once in a relationship with his recently deceased mother. Bree and Toby embark on a cross-country journey from New York to Los Angeles. Sure people might scoff by saying that this is another cross-country road movie. But if you look into the movie beyond the surface, it's really about a journey of a man trying to adapt into womanhood and the hardships it is in trying to adjust to the new life that has become of Bree.

Tucker cleverly uses Bree's dreadful occupation as a telemarketer as a symbol of the obstacles Stanley faced during his quest of becoming a woman and Huffman utilizes her character's vulnerable traits and stiff posture. Sure it looked like open field for comical farce, but her acting it pitch perfect and takes her training and regiments very seriously which is all very believable. With the help from Jason Hayes (wig designer) we get to see the gradual physical molding of a man turn woman right before our very eyes and the fear of Bree returning to her old alter ego.

The supporting cast backs Huffman up nicely. Young Kevin Zegers was accurate as the poor young confused misunderstood soul Toby who's oblivious that his father is now a mother and that Bree cowardly lied to Toby saying she was a church missionary when really she's really his biological father. Elizabeth Pena of "Lone Star" fame was sublime as Bree's strong-opinioned therapist. Graham Greene ("Dances With Wolves") was in top form as Bree's suitor Calvin Manygoats. And the scene-stealing comes from Bree's parents played by Bert Young and Fionnula Flanagan who are in perpetual denial over their son's life-rendering decision.

Along with the parents, Carrie Preston as Bree's sister Sidney make the perfect dysfunctional family comedy foil as they easily go into Bree's self-loathing which is par for the course in most families who try to deal with problems. The film sporadically shifts into being overly sentimental tear-jerker and instead Tucker focuses more on the comedy elements and the absurd scenes that follow. This is a film worthy of its accolades and I'm sure you'll enjoy it too.
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7/10
transamerica is trans gender
samzpan1 January 2006
I guess it's OK to be trans gender nowadays, at least this latest movie from Hollywood paints a very sympathetic portrait of a man changing his sex to female. And by the end of the movie he gets the operation that removes his "angry inch" ( but actually much larger than that, when in one scene he exposes him self while urinating). And of course, Kevin Zegers, who is one hot little number that looks great in tighty-whiteys, and also can act! The movie becomes a bit formulastic when we visit the home of the parents of the soon to be female, but most of the time plays like it is realilty. Zegers plays a teenage hustler who is pretty naive about sex if he can't figure out the man he is traveling across the country with is not a woman. The sundance channel series on trans gender people in their early twenties gives a startling hard reality view of what it means to be sexually confused. This movie is more of a fantasy about changing your biological sex, but it is entertaining, has its funny and sad moments, and if you are curious about "trans gender" identity, this flick is also educational.
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2/10
Most overrated film of the year
filmforum112 February 2006
Hate to say it, though. This film is so earnest and so desirous of improving the lives of the marginalized. What a pity it was written and directed by a social worker.

Overall, there are few moments in the film that aren't contrived, telegraphed, clichéd, or overwrought. The story is a case study and a conceit without artistic merit. Neither the acting nor the direction has any credibility.

Ms Huffman's acting is an extended vaudeville routine. You have to have a reason for doing what you do in film. The depiction of a man who is becoming a woman is already a notion, perhaps an interesting one, given a truly creative treatment. The idea of choosing a woman to play a man who's becoming a woman, however, is a trick -- sophomoric at best. Go to any downtown in any large city; you'll see more convincing transsexuals and they're real. Heck, Tim Curry was more authentic. The deepening of Ms Huffman's voice works for a few minutes. Some of her gestures are masculine, but so what? Exactly what is the film saying by asking a female to pretend she's a male pretending to be a female?

On a theatrical stage -- not on film -- given a very spare, intimate script, this conceit might work. On a stage, this sort of layering plays within the imagination : it's imaginary, not "photographic." In the world of film, however, the camera's eye is primary. Ms Huffman's routine is doomed because it's trying to cover "reality" with 2 meaningless coats of falsity.

Everything rings wrong about the movie. The scenes at the parents' house are bad TV sit-com -- dumb farce. The Noble Indian who gives the characters a ride is an embarrassment. He has all the depth of a figure on a coin. Why would a Native be more interested in this he-she-wee-wee than us Dumb White People? If there's a reason, you'd better show it to the audience. The role of the hustler is a throw-away: what sort of teenager would put up with such condescension? This unhappy film should just go quietly into the can, back to the Department of Social Work.
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