Any film that makes an impact is going to please some folk, and upset others. The problem with the IMDB is that regardless of the film, you are going to get comments that cluster towards opposite ends of the spectrum. That being the case I think you'll be lucky to get a representative picture of how the film was received by the trans community.
Judging from the general responses here, it's had a better reception than, say, There's Something About Miriam where the participants of that reality show are deliberately deceived by the producers to believe that Miriam is a non-trans woman. But there's the difference - deliberate deceit vs a more realistic reaction by people to someone who's different.
I mention the above because my reaction to the film was influenced by my experience in "coming out" as trans back in 1994. At that time it was really hard to find a way to gently "break the ice" on the subject. As it happened I took my mother to see a film The Sum of Us before I came out to her. The film shows a gay son who is "just a nice bloke" (played by Russell Crowe no less) who lives with his accepting father - he was different but OK. When I did come out, my mother though i was going to say that I was gay! The next year Priscilla came out and that But, if this film had been around, I would have taken her to see Transamerica instead.
When I started my transition I was deeply conservative and emotionally vulnerable, much like Bree. By the time I had my surgery (2000) a lot had changed and I was much less worried about "passing" or others opinions. That being the case, I saw a lot of myself in Bree and could identify with her. And because of that I liked the film, because by the end of it, Bree has grown emotionally and is in a much better place socially than before.
This is not because she's had "the op", but because now she's connection not only with a son she never knew she had, but with her family as well. Those connections aren't perfect, and neither is Bree, which I found realistic and reassuring. It makes her human, and that's a world of difference from how trans people have generally been portrayed in films, which in the past rather tends to be as freaks, curiosities or victims. Of course it's not the perfect film either, but two years ago when I visited my mother in Perth I took a copy with me and we watched it together. Some of the scenes (Bree urinating for example) upset her, but she enjoyed it all the same.
It seems to me that most common objections I've heard (non-trans actress in main role; main character is following conservative medical model) are more quibbles than major issues. While a trans actress could have been used, I wonder just which actress would have accepted the role and run the risk of being type-cast as a 'trans actress playing trans women'? Casting a non-trans woman (even though she seems to be made more plain by make-up and dress) defuses issues of identity for the non-trans viewer. And the conservative role that Bree plays is actually played up in the film, showing her "trying too hard" to be the person she knows herself to be. By the end of the film she's more relaxed and more casual.
Was I outraged by the film? No. Was I disappointed with it? No, as I had few expectations. I liked the film, even with its flaws. If film let others down, then what they should do is encourage other films that won't.
Laura S
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