Tumbleweeds Movie Review
Tumbleweeds Review

"Tumbleweeds" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Gavin O'ConnorProducer : Greg O'Connor
Screenwiter : Gavin O'Connor,Angela Shelton
Starring Janet Mcteer, Kimberly Brown, Gavin O'connor, Jay O Sanders, Lois Smith, Laurel Holloman
Mother and daughter pack up from hillbilly land and head for California: Does
it sound like we've been over this ground before?
The similarities between Tumbleweeds and Anywhere But Here (the corpse of which
is not even cold) are astonishing. In Tumbleweeds, Mom Mary Jo (McTeer) is a
put-upon single mother; daughter Ava (Brown) is brash and headstrong. The two
drive to California, intent on "starting over," -- in the case of Tumbleweeds,
an escape from physical abuse, or at least the threat of it. Anywhere But
Here: same story, sans the abuse.
Both films bumble through experiences with lovers (mother and daughter),
school, work, and the other rigors of daily life, eventually focusing on the
relationship between mom and kid.
The former movie was a piece of junk, and Tumbleweeds is not a terribly better
movie than the disaster of Anywhere But Here. It's safe to say that your
feelings about one will apply to the other. Tumbleweeds does manage to redeem
itself above its competitor, though. For starters, cross-eyed British actress
McTeer does an astonishing job at playing West Virginian. Brown's Ava is sure
to launch her on a Jena Malone-path to child stardom. And the supporting
characters are universally good in this film, unlike the former.
But perhaps the most astonishing facet of Tumbleweeds is the discovery that it
was co-written and directed by one Gavin O'Connor, who turns out to play the
post-dumb, not-quite-abusive truck driver boyfriend from whom Mary Jo and Ava
eventually run away. That alone makes Tumbleweeds interesting as a curiosity.
O'Connor should be put in a museum next to Forest Whitaker.
In the film, these tumbleweeds ultimately have to decide whether or not to
settle down, and that at least gives the movie some closure. The story along
the way is choppy and predictable, with the exception of a few gross-out
moments: I'm quite sure I could have done without the mother-daughter farting
scene.
Get them dogies rollin'.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



