A striking, elegant chamber drama about identity, desire, and the social performance of race. Its controlled pacing and ambiguous emotional currents may feel elusive, but the performances, monochrome imagery, and period atmosphere make it a rewarding watch for viewers who like subtle, psychologically layered films.
57% ★★★☆☆ (59,003)
Passing
Where to watch: Netflix
Movie · Drama · PG-13
2021 · 1h 38m · ★ 57% (59K)
Nothing is black and white.
Director: Rebecca Hall
Starring: Tessa Thompson, Ruth Negga, André Holland
Overview
In 1920s New York City, a Black woman finds her world upended when her life becomes intertwined with a former childhood friend who's passing as white.
Tessa Thompson, Ruth Negga, André Holland, Alexander Skarsgård, Bill Camp, Gbenga Akinnagbe, Antoinette Crowe-Legacy, Justus Davis Graham, Ethan Barrett, Ashley Ware Jenkins, Amos J. Machanic, Stu S. Becker, Tom White, Margaret Daly, Kerry Flanagan, Buzz Roddy, Derek Roberts, Amber Barbee Pickens, Samuel Coleman, Tatiana Marie Barber
Where to watch
Netflix, Netflix Standard with Ads
Curator Review
Verdict
A striking, elegant chamber drama about identity, desire, and the social performance of race. Its controlled pacing and ambiguous emotional currents may feel elusive, but the performances, monochrome imagery, and period atmosphere make it a rewarding watch for viewers who like subtle, psychologically layered films.
Best for
viewers who enjoy restrained character studies
fans of visually expressive black-and-white cinema
people interested in race, identity, and social performance
audiences who like ambiguous, slow-burn dramas
Skip if
you want a plot-driven film with clear answers
you dislike elliptical or understated storytelling
you prefer warm, emotionally direct dramas
you are not in the mood for tense interpersonal unease
Overview
Passing is a debut that looks deceptively classical while quietly cutting into something much more unstable. Rebecca Hall stages the story with severe elegance, using the frame, the light, and the silences to make every glance feel loaded with history, longing, and danger.
Worth noting
What lingers most is the friction between the two central performances. Tessa Thompson and Ruth Negga give the film its pulse: one character drawn toward containment, the other toward risk, each exposing the other’s self-deceptions. The movie is less interested in tidy revelation than in the emotional cost of maintaining a life.
Bottom line
It can feel deliberately elusive, even withholding, and that will frustrate some viewers. But for anyone drawn to films that trust mood, subtext, and visual composition, Passing is a sharp, haunting piece of work that stays in the mind long after it ends.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Karsten (3.5★) · 1151 likes
a shame that i put out a video all about 4:3 two weeks ago because this is one of the best examples of a movie that knew what it was doing with it
Paul (4.5★) · 960 likes
I’ll be honest, the first time I watched this movie everything in my mind was set on disliking it. I agreed with (and to an extent still do) the idea that Tessa Thompson didn’t necessarily pass. I’d seen her in enough movies that were in color to imagine that i wouldn’t be able to suspend my disbelief. Boy was I wrong. The performances were stellar but the film still left me a bit lost which I now attribute to a
Dawson (2.5★) · 899 likes
Rebecca Hall: in my directorial debut- Sundance: okay great Rebecca: i’ll be dissecting American race relations in the context of 1920s Harlem Sundance: sounds fantastic Rebecca: and it’s shot in black-and-white Sundance: say no more Rebecca: to symbolize the complexities of- Sundance: YO Rebecca: colorism and repression in the gray areas between the lines Sundance: YOOOO Rebecca: did i mention the 4:3 aspect ratio? Sundance: *flatlines*
Kyle Turner (4★) · 726 likes
good movie about the erotic tension of being attracted to someone you find fundamentally obnoxious
Lucy (3.5★) · 617 likes
SUNDANCE 2021: film #11 “things aren’t always what they seem” i was totally convinced that i loved this until it ended and i actually started weighing it properly. it begins so strong but as it becomes more introspective the narrative in turn got a bit lost. that’s not a bad thing, there are a lot of things worked into the script that work really well as separate pieces and conversations until they start to dissolve together (for better or for… more
2013 · Drama, History · 2h 14m · R · ★ 93% (1.5M) · Where to watch: Hulu
A more brutal but thematically adjacent look at racial identity, survival, and the violence of social systems.
Themes
racial passing, identity and self-invention, colorism, repression, desire and attraction, social performance, friendship and betrayal, class and respectability