Why "Powder Blue"? One can only assume it's a reference to the (seriously fake-looking) blue snow that the ex-priest plays with in front of the church. It represents hope, get it?
The writing: I _have_ to mention the extended soft-focus Hallmark scene where the dead grandfather meets the dead grandson IN HEAVEN! ON THE BEACH! I literally said, "Oh my god" when I saw it. I can't believe they actually filmed this cliché in the 21st century. Keep in mind that this is only minutes after the scene where the ex-priest meets his dead wife in a graveyard (considering it was him who put her there, you'd think she might not be so friendly!).
The characters: a * with a heart of gold, a priest who has lost his way, a geek, and an old man (not really a criminal as the back story is not really developed). The snow may be fresh, but these characters ain't.
The plot: a geek, though he passes out merely at the sight of a plain girl, gets it on with a beautiful one (and _she_ suggests it!), a father chooses to reunite with his long-lost daughter in the sex room of a strip club, a woman suddenly offers sex to a doctor so that he can somehow better "help" her dying son, a waitress who is working late suddenly goes home with (and then comes on to) an unkempt stranger who was passed out at her diner only moments before, a guy loses his wife on their wedding day because he's fooling around with the video-cam in their car, the same person somehow has his car stolen in the dead of night while he is only a few feet away (this guy has bad luck with cars!), a male prostitute, though he refused a lot of money to kill a willing victim, suddenly kills _himself_ for no apparent reason, the youth of 2009 are readily entertained by a puppet show (with only one puppet, no dialogue, and a visible puppeteer!), a guy rejects a beautiful girl's offer to come in, a guy thrusts a gun into the hands of strangers and asks them to kill him, etc. Perhaps "unlikely" is the kindest word that can be used here.
Casting: casting Ray Liotta as a walking dead man was apt, as he certainly looks the part. I thought Swayze and Phoebe from Friends were "ironic" choices, but it looks like...not. As far as the * actress, most here seem concerned only with her * scenes, but she was passable as the main character.
It's not well-made, no matter how you slice it and it's certainly not "excellent" (!) as some here might have you believe. It's a made-for-TV Crash, is what it is.