Transamerica
From the moment that Felicity Huffman comes on screen inTransamerica, with her rumbling voice and the cloistered manners of a 1950s housewife, it’s apparent you’re in for something rarely seen before in American film. Playing the transsexual Bree, who is getting ready for the final gender reassignment surgery that will complete her transition to true womanhood, Huffman creates a character who isn’t terribly interested in gender politics but just wants to be allowed to live on her own terms. As such, it’s a brave and tough piece of acting – a woman playing a man aching to become a woman – that truly breaks barriers. Unfortunately, there’s a lousy movie wrapped around her that one must suffer through to see her.
Tucker has obviously done his homework on this subculture, showing in well-detailed terms how these people in transition from one gender to the gender live out their daily lives. There’s no question but that he has presented here an affectionate portrait of the often-misunderstood, going out of his way to show Bree as a true woman who only needs the surgery so that she can finally feel at peace in her own body. It’s with everything else in the film that Tucker runs into trouble.
The bulk of Transamerica is made up of the desperately madcap adventures which Toby and Bree get into on the road from New York to L.A. – where he hopes to break into porn stardom. Everything here, from Bree’s last-minute decision to hide her true identity from Toby (she pretends she’s a missionary) to an excruciating section with Bree’s parents, works barely as comedy and even less well as drama. A woefully short highlight is when the two run into Calvin, a good old boy who gets a crush on Bree. Played with endearing warmth by the masterful Graham Greene, Calvin has a rambling ease missing from the rest of the film, his too-brief scenes finally giving Huffman someone of similar caliber to play against. This sort of critical misjudgment is typical of this crushingly dull film which practically hides Huffman’s breakthrough performance behind a wall of Indie Screenwriting 101 clichés.
The DVD (packaged in one of the freakiest "magic motion" sleeves ever, in which Huffman morphs into Bree before your eyes) includes commentary track, behind-the-scenes featurette, and two interviews.

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