Screened as part of NZIFF 2018

The Rider 2017

Directed by Chloé Zhao World

Chloé Zhao directs “this poetic, laconic and ineffably beautiful drama [with] an unerring feel for its subject, a young cowboy struggling against his implacable fate in the American West.” — Joe Morgenstern, Wall St Journal

USA In English
104 minutes CinemaScope/DCP

Director/Screenplay

Producers

Chloé Zhao
,
Bert Hamelinck
,
Sacha Ben Harroche
,
Mollye Asher

Photography

Joshua James Richards

Editor

Alex O’Flinn

Music

Nathan Halpern

With

Brady Jandreau (Brady Blackburn)
,
Tim Jandreau (Wayne Blackburn)
,
Lilly Jandreau (Lilly Blackburn)
,
Lane Scott
,
Cat Clifford

Festivals

Cannes (Directors’ Fortnight)
,
Telluride
,
Toronto
,
London
,
New York 2017; Sundance
,
Rotterdam
,
SXSW
,
San Francisco 2018

The Rider, a marvellous film by Chloé Zhao, tells the story of rodeo horseman Brady Blackburn, who, after suffering a near-fatal head injury after being stepped on by a bucking bronco, must find his place within a world where the phrase ‘ride or die’ takes on real, high-stakes meaning.

Blackburn is played by Brady Jandreau, a real-life bronc rider who sustained similar injuries. After Zhao met him while researching another film [Songs My Brothers Taught Me, NZIFF16], she decided to create a movie around him, lightly fictionalizing his story and casting other non-professionals – including Brady’s father and sister – in supporting roles. Filmed with widescreen grandeur on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, The Rider reinvigorates tropes from the western genre of men, horses, honor codes and vast expanses of nature with a refreshing lack of sentimentality, without sacrificing their inherent lyricism and poetry...

This rigorous, compassionate film possesses instinct and sensitivity worthy of Jandreau, who has a fabulous face for the screen, projecting natural charisma despite an almost wordless reticence. There are excruciating moments in The Rider and some exquisite ones, too – of recklessness and resilience, and rituals of communion between Jandreau and his human and animal companions that take on the liminal beauty of prayer. Zhao is a filmmaker of extraordinary tact and insight: She has taken a story that could have been unremarkable or too romanticized and made it into something honest, magnificent and lasting.” — Anne Hornaday, Washington Post