Director, co-writer, and star Jake Allyn’s new film, Ride, is a rugged and somber tale about the life of a rodeo rider and a family in crisis and an honest depiction of the life of the American Cowboy.
C. Thomas Howell is John, a Texas ranch owner who is close to financial ruin, as he struggles to pay for his daughter, Virginia’s (Zia Carlock), cancer treatments. As Virginia has been accepted to a special facility, John is told it will cost $160,000, an amount far out of his reach.
John’s marriage to his wife, Monica (Annabeth Gish), is strained from all the emotional weight. Monica is the local sheriff and is spending a lot of time away from the office, as she is by her daughter’s side as much as possible. That this is an election year makes things even harder, while her deputy, Ross (Scott Reeves), is eyeing her job and just maybe pining for her company.
Director Allyn plays Peter, John and Virginia’s oldest son. As the film opens, he is released from prison, a stretch that allowed him the opportunity to get clean from addiction. Peter is haunted by guilt (regarding the tragedy that sent him to jail) and returns to his old drug dealer Tyler (Patrick Murney), with whom he makes a deal to pay for a fix of Oxy now with his financial winnings from an upcoming rodeo. As Tyler knows how good of a rider his old “pal” was, he agrees.
Peter and John wear shame and regret like an old gunslinger wears his gun belt. In the face of family tragedy, it has become a part of them both. A shocking turn of events causes the estranged father and son to reunite and patch up their long-broken bond.
Written by Allyn and Josh Plasse (who plays Peter’s brother, Noah), the screenplay is quite strong and explores three generations of a family born and bred into the Cowboy culture, with each member carrying different crosses of guilt. John is a man built with grit, but one who is finding it demeaning how he cannot save his young daughter. Monica never visited her son in the four years he was in prison and now finds herself at the head of a murder investigation that will test her loyalties to her family and her sworn duty as sheriff. Allyn’s direction allows for Howell and Gish to go deep into their characters; both actors giving tremendously moving and honest performances.
As Peter, Allyn does well, even as he broods too often. The pain of his past and bleak future burn strong in his deep eyes, while his slow movements signal a man walking an unsteady path.
One of the picture’s strongest performances is from Forrie J. Smith as Grandpa Al. The actor is a born and bred cowboy who has lived the rodeo circuit life. A standout on the Tyler Sheridan series Yellowstone, Smith’s gravelly voice and roughly handsome features, the actor brings a purity and kindness to his well-crafted character. This is the sort of character Sam Shepard writes about so well and Smith does it (and the film) justice.
Ride is particularly well-shot. Keith J. Leman’s cinematography brings home the darkness of the world the family is living in while capturing the bright light, dirt covered glory of the rodeo scene.
Leman’s camera colors the film’s somber tone with carefully designed lighting and good use of his frame.
While the screenplay is an involving rumination on mistakes, regret, and the healing hands of time, Allyn and Plasse have something important to say about our fractured American healthcare system. As a young girl’s life is in the hands of the medical profession, it is John’s inability to come up with all the money at once that will put young Virginia’s life in danger. For profit hospitals are destroying families and killing those in need.
As a filmmaker, Jake Allyn knows how to craft a drama and seems to know the world of rodeos. From the bull riding, to the small town feel, to the accurate depiction of ranch life, everything feels authentic. Allyn’s patient direction gets to the heart of the story and its characters with focused understanding. His film deserves mention alongside Sam Peckinpah’s Junior Bonner and Cliff Robertson’s J.W. Coop, two fantastic films about rodeo riders in family and personal crisis.
Moody, involving, and ultimately moving, Ride is a very good film that bleeds with the soul of a Western.
Ride
Written by Josh Plasse & Jake Allyn Directed by Jake Allyn
Directed by Jake Allyn
Starring C. Thomas Howell, Annabeth Gish, Jake Allyn, Forrie J. Smith, Zia Carlock, Josh Plasse, Patrick Murney
R, 108 Minutes, Margate Films, Pine Bay Pictures, Well Go USA