IMDb RATING
6.2/10
9.1K
YOUR RATING
An editor offers actress/bartender Reese $100,000 for her late mom's letters from her novelist dad. She heads home from NYC to get them and finds her dad living in the garage while two stran... Read allAn editor offers actress/bartender Reese $100,000 for her late mom's letters from her novelist dad. She heads home from NYC to get them and finds her dad living in the garage while two strangers live in the house.An editor offers actress/bartender Reese $100,000 for her late mom's letters from her novelist dad. She heads home from NYC to get them and finds her dad living in the garage while two strangers live in the house.
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
What a nice film! The premise is simple: Actress Reese Holden (played by Zooey Deschanel) is offered a lot of money if she can get hold of letters written to and by her late mother and father, novelist Don Holdin (played be Ed Harris). Reese hasn't seen her father for a long time; she hadn't gone to her mother's funeral. Ed Harris, performing with sensitivity and rigour (as in Pollock and The Hours)gives a fine performance as the socially maladaptive, reclusive "genius" counterpointed by s dazed, bewildered, but protective Corbit (Will Ferrell, who gives a fine performance. I've just seen him in The Producers, and physically/vocally he is *completely* different. It's a good role.) Like Pieces of April, the film works with silences, visual cues, and verbal cues intertwined. It is a film which is worth concentrating in - and Zooey Deschanel's performance as Reese Holdin is excellent. She doesn't go over the top, rather it is through a subdued range that she succeeds in winning over the audience. Don't miss this film, or let it pass you by.
drugs, sex, a disturbed girl with a disturbed past, her father is a salinger-esquire recluse, and when she doesn't want to find anything back home, she finds herself.
this is the description of this film and about 100 films a year at every film festival you attend. you can throw a ball into a pit of films at a film festival and hit a dozen of these. the only reason this one got made is because of the cast. that's it. it moves very slowly along and doesn't dare make an interesting scene captivating enough to wake you from your sleep. the only redeeming factor is Will Ferrell's character. he is quite funny and as you can imagine does at some comic relief. there is nothing special from this movie. there is nothing in this movie that separates it from any other indie film. don't expect much from this "how to make an indie film" film.
this is the description of this film and about 100 films a year at every film festival you attend. you can throw a ball into a pit of films at a film festival and hit a dozen of these. the only reason this one got made is because of the cast. that's it. it moves very slowly along and doesn't dare make an interesting scene captivating enough to wake you from your sleep. the only redeeming factor is Will Ferrell's character. he is quite funny and as you can imagine does at some comic relief. there is nothing special from this movie. there is nothing in this movie that separates it from any other indie film. don't expect much from this "how to make an indie film" film.
Winter Passing introduces a few great characters inside of an interesting family reconciliation plot, but fails to deliver with the results. Deschanel does a great job anchoring the film's emotional context as the very multidimensional, seemingly jaded Reese and the always dependable Ed Harris does more with one eye then many actors can emote during an impassioned speech. Will Ferrell however, despite being the go-to comedic relief in a very somber film, simply cannot disappear outside of himself enough as an actor to ever truly play a character other then his endless Saturday night live variations, and to me his awareness almost condescends the film's emotional impact. Nevertheless, the film will have you engaged in the offbeat family situation we are thrust into, only to have it become tied up way too neatly and quickly at the end. This lack of a thought out finale will make the emotional attachments made throughout the film with the main characters not as hard hitting as the movie perhaps intended, but still delivers a pretty solid, if a little unfulfilled, drama.
Winter Passing is remarkable for several reasons. The performances of Zooey Deschanel and Ed Harris are resonant and moving. The look and the music of the film are quite lovely and evoke a hurt, longing that works well with the theme of the film. And finally, the story itself is remarkable for anyone who's familiar with the life and enigma of the writer J.D. Salinger. For anyone who has read his daughter, Margaret Salinger's wonderful memoir, "Dream Catcher," the film will play like a thinly veiled reference to her life with the highly lauded and tragically flawed father who is a legend and inspiration to generations and a horror as a father.
One of the challenges Winter Passing faces is getting the audience to empathize with characters enough to ride the film's emotional ups-and-downs. Director Adam Rapp took a risk by placing so many of the events which define each character outside of the story, instead conveying these details through conversations between characters (i.e. "Who's pills are these?" or "Who is Corbit and why does he live here?").
The potential reward of this "Tell-Don't-Show" approach is that the director can add dimension to the characters by providing a greater quantity of personal history and details. The risk, however, is that the audience won't invest enough emotionally in the characters to really care about what happens to them.
The acting was quite good; I'm always glad to see Will Ferrell push beyond his slapstick beginnings, and he and Zooey Deschanel have very believable chemistry. But by relying so heavily on dialogue and description, the film subverts the medium, and made it hard for me to identify with any of the four main characters.
The potential reward of this "Tell-Don't-Show" approach is that the director can add dimension to the characters by providing a greater quantity of personal history and details. The risk, however, is that the audience won't invest enough emotionally in the characters to really care about what happens to them.
The acting was quite good; I'm always glad to see Will Ferrell push beyond his slapstick beginnings, and he and Zooey Deschanel have very believable chemistry. But by relying so heavily on dialogue and description, the film subverts the medium, and made it hard for me to identify with any of the four main characters.
Did you know
- TriviaThe kitten playing Spike was found in an animal shelter and saved from being put to sleep. It was adopted by a producer's brother.
- GoofsThe end credits list the family name for Don and Reese as being "Holden," however, on the title/cover page for "Golf," the new manuscript for the book by Don, the name is typed as "Holdin." Also, on the cover of the book which Don sent to Reese on her opening night the author's name is spelled "Holdin."
- SoundtracksMy Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean
(pub. 1881)
Traditional
Written by H.J. Fuller (uncredited)
Performed by Zooey Deschanel
- How long is Winter Passing?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $3,500,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $107,492
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $28,091
- Feb 19, 2006
- Gross worldwide
- $113,783
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content