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6/10
Show, Don't Tell
1 June 2006
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.
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Æon Flux (2005)
5/10
Civil Suffering in Fair Bregna ***SPOILERS***
11 May 2006
Warning: Spoilers
So often it seems that action movies shuck the notion that characters need to have plausible motives (so you don't have to think so much about who's good and who's evil??) but I was extra disappointed here because it would have been such a small step to make the movie believable without sacrificing the aspects which make for a good action movie.

Just to be sure, was the problem that a 400-year-old scientist was cooped up in a placenta-like blimp, covertly cloning people in order to keep the species alive? Was that the root cause of the civil suffering in fair Bregna, or was it that this "Goodchild" government kept everyone in the dark, prevented political participation, and kept on killing people at random? I'd argue that the cloning was probably a pretty good idea, but the whole stylish-but-apathetic-scientific-elite-murderous-government thing was the problem, which made it hard for me to like Trevor, no matter how charming he seemed. For the same reason, I found it hard to buy Aeon's manifesto toward the end ... the bit about people only living once and having babies the old-fashioned way, delivered while she's holding hands with Trevor looking at the jungle beyond the giant stone wall (busted up like *THAT* by a blimp?!).

Anyway, it gets a five in my book, because it was good fun despite its drawbacks, and the acting was surprisingly good for an action movie.
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