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Winter Passing (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:51
Fresh:21
Rotten:30
Average Rating:5.4/10
Consensus: This dour coming-of-age story has nothing to distinguish it from similarly themed indie fare.
Synopsis: Adam Rapp makes his impressive feature film directorial debut with WINTER PASSING, an intimate, often bleak, but ultimately hopeful film about the importance of family, however dysfunctional. Zooey... Adam Rapp makes his impressive feature film directorial debut with WINTER PASSING, an intimate, often bleak, but ultimately hopeful film about the importance of family, however dysfunctional. Zooey Deschanel carries the movie as Reese Holdin, a sullen, depressed, self-mutilating actress struggling to stay afloat in New York. When an aggressive editor (Amy Madigan) offers her a fat check in exchange for the love letters written by her famous writer parents, she returns to her father's Michigan farm in search of a payday, but instead finds herself trying to connect with her estranged father (Ed Harris), as well as the odd surrogate family he's assembled for himself. Rapp's script is sharp and his direction is solid, but his greatest achievement may be the performances he coaxes from his talented cast. Ed Harris is powerful and moving as Don Holdin (whose last name makes the Salinger reference explicit), an erstwhile American icon who's become alcoholic, reclusive, and borderline insane since the recent suicide of his wife. Will Ferrell shows off unexpected range with an effective, understated comic turn as Corbit, an odd former Christian rocker turned bodyguard and handyman, and Amelia Warner is engaging as Shelly, a pretty young former student who watches over Don and might or might not be his lover. But it's Deschanel who propels the movie, making her character at times profoundly unlikable--as in a jarring early scene in which she drowns her terminally ill kitten in the East River--but nevertheless riveting and redeemable. While there's never much doubt that Reese will manage to rediscover herself with the help of her father and his companions, the characters are unique and well-drawn, and watching her do so is a pleasure. [More]
Starring: Zooey Deschanel, Will Ferrell, Amy Madigan, Rachel Dratch
Starring: Zooey Deschanel, Will Ferrell, Amy Madigan, Rachel Dratch, Amelia Warner, Ed Harris, Michael Chernus, Anthony Rapp
Director: Adam Rapp
Director: Adam Rapp
Producer: Laura Bickford
Studio: Yari Film Group
Reviews for Winter Passing
Sometimes a single scene sets such a strong tone that the rest of the film has a hard time breaking it.
There are intriguing actors and ideas here, but only occasionally do they combine with convincing force.
Unfortunately, as a character, Don -- Roth-like in stature, Salinger-esque in seclusion -- and the angst of a blossoming performer among literary giants is too familiar to feel fresh.
Performances keep the film afloat and focused whenever it threatens to drift.
This is the kind of movie routinely dismissed as too slow and quiet by those who don't know it is more exciting to listen than to hear.
Midway through, Rapp loses momentum, failing to hone in on just what kind of movie he wants to make, and Winter Passing languishes in that no-man's land between tiny, meandering, indie drama and plotted, pointed family melodrama.
[Rapp] brings out in Deschanel a sense of yearning, an avidity, that hits home. It's her most emotionally layered performance.
Exaggerated drama about emotional disability after a family-fracturing loss provides a performance piece for Deschanel's depth and Will Ferrell's other side.
While Deschanel is the reason to see Winter Passing, her support is nearly impeccable in keeping it from being a one-woman show.
It's a disturbing movie, particularly the first half, and one not easily digested.
Unfortunately, this too-dour film can't decide whether it wants to be a comedy or a drama. As a result, it doesn't really work as either.
If you're looking for something a bit more lighthearted, head elsewhere. But that doesn't mean we're going to give a bad Rapp to this dark and complex tale.
The way it’s done is so authentic, and you have such good performances from everybody involved here, and some very true writing.
Stand in the middle of a film festival and swing a stick and you're bound to hit a movie just like this.
Latest News for Winter Passing
February 06, 2006:
Cut it out Will and get back to wacky comedies. ![]()
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