Los Angeles Times

Together, a family faces a transition

- — Gary Goldstein

The transgende­rthemed dramedy “3 Generation­s” may have seemed especially well timed when it shot in late 2014. But given the wealth of sociopolit­ical and artistic attention trans culture has received since, this long-delayed release can’t help but feel a bit behind the curve.

Ray (Elle Fanning), a transgende­r teen boy, is aching to begin his physical transition but first needs written consent from his conflicted single mother, Maggie (Naomi Watts), and estranged father, Craig (Tate Donovan). Meanwhile, Maggie’s lesbian mom, Dodo (Susan Sarandon), and partner, Honey (Linda Emond), attempt to wrap their feminist heads around Ray’s decision.

Ray and Maggie’s emotionall­y charged showdowns with the demonized Craig, the fraught reappearan­ce of Maggie’s ex-lover — and Craig’s brother — Matthew (Sam Trammell), and Ray’s angst over his pending hormone therapy dominate the action, shortchang­ing the intriguing Dodo and Honey — and the titular dynamic.

Director Gaby Dellal, who co-wrote with Nikole Beckwith, works overtime pushing the film’s bohemian atmosphere, quirkiness and offhand humor when a simpler, dramatic approach might have served better.

Still, when this well-acted picture calms down and focuses on real emotions, it proves a poignant, absorbing look at a modern family.

“3 Generation­s.” Rating: PG-13, for mature thematic content, some sexual references and language. 1 hour, 32 minutes. Playing: ArcLight Cinemas, Hollywood; Laemmle Playhouse 7, Pasadena; Regency South Coast Village, Santa Ana.

 ?? George Nicholis The Weinstein Co. ?? THE TITLE refers to characters played by, from left, Elle Fanning, Naomi Watts and Susan Sarandon.
George Nicholis The Weinstein Co. THE TITLE refers to characters played by, from left, Elle Fanning, Naomi Watts and Susan Sarandon.

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