Jockey is intimate and personal. Its visual structure is lyrical and golden. I couldnโt tell you really what amount of time the movie takes place over. It could be 1 week or 6 months, and it doesnโt matter. Itโs a gritty dream. Unfortunately, the admittedly gorgeous visuals and flow are indebted to another film, which took me out from time to time.
A once renowned, now just scraping by, jockey named Jackson (Clifton Collins Jr.) is making ends meet at a horse racing track in Phoenix. He picks up work from a trainer (Molly Parker) who may just have an opportunity for him that could reinvigorate his career. But, all of that becomes more complicated when a kid named Gabriel (Moisรฉs Arias) shows up and claims to be his son.ย
In the year of our lord 2017, a movie named The Rider began making its way around the festival circuit. Its director, Chloรฉ Zhao, brought forth a naturalistic, achingly intimate portrait of a poor rodeo rider trying to continue riding despite a serious head injury. She has recently gone on to direct last yearโs Nomadland, the upcoming Marvel film The Eternals, and apparently a Sci-fi Dracula Western or something? I donโt know. But, The Rider is a beautiful movie, and I couldnโt recommend it enough. The reason I bring all of this up is that Jockey is indebted to The Rider astronomically, almost comically: Itโs visual aesthetic; basic story set up. Everything is very, very close. Iโm not saying that Jockey is stealing, or that any movies about down and out horse folks canโt be made now because of The Rider. But, you gotta at least bury your inspirations a little harder than this, especially when you are trying to tell your own story that covers similar ground. Itโs painfully obvious, and it takes away from the movie. Itโs distracting. Look, I know everyone making movies in this style is ultimately trying to remake Badlands, but everyone has to have their own interpretation of Terrence Malick. When you take too much from something so recent, it has to be addressed.
Alright. Iโm done. Enough spot-the-difference/comparative stuff. I donโt want to get too bogged down in this. Jockey is pretty excellent, so letโs talk more about it, shall we?
Right off the bat, Clifton Collins Jr. is absolutely superb in this. We spend virtually every second of the movie with him. Itโs his movie. His portrayal of Jackson is so layered and restrained. You canโt take your eyes off him. The rest of the cast is excellent as well, several of which seemed to be non-actors, another similarity with The Rider (Okay. Iโm done. That was the last one.) Describing Jackson, and by extension the movie itself, is difficult. You spend so much time living with this man and everything is so quiet and intimate, it can be hard to describe everything youโve seen to someone who isnโt involved. Itโs like trying to sum up, with any level of nuance or objectiveness, the last 4 months of your life. Where do you begin? What do you leave out? Itโs all so personal and not nearly objective enough. I do suppose the struggle in finding an accurate description says something in and of itself though. It feels like I lived through all of Jackson’s hardships with him. I donโt have as much of an objective perspective as I normally do on a movie. The plot and all of that stuff could be conveyed, sure. But, who cares. What stuck with me were all the small things. The way Jackson reacts to finding out about his prospective son. The soul-crushing look on his face as a doctor is telling him some very bad news. Seeing him slowly come to terms with the idea of dying during a race. This is what has stayed with me. Watching this movie is like falling asleep and dreaming someone elseโs dream. Part of it becomes a part of you.
Outside of the movieโs poetry, we have the plot. Sometimes, it would begin to creep up in ways that feel very unassured. Itโs as if the filmmakers werenโt confident in what they had, so they felt like they needed to infuse plot into the film to bolster it up. The movie doesnโt need it at all, and it always feels out of place. When characters are talking about โThe Big Raceโ or whatever, it rings false. Not because itโs strange for them to talk about things happening in their world, or that it is even bad plotting. It rings untrue because the movie shifts and the filmmaking is covering these events like we really need to get a hold of whatโs happening. We donโt. Itโs a nitpick to be sure, but itโs odd to see these scenes of plotting inside a movie that is a lyrical portrait everywhere else. Iโm much more interested in the musicality of the performances and visuals than any element of plot.
With previously mentioned comparisons aside, the cinematography in Jockey is standout. Much of the movie is shot during golden hour, and they make the most of it. Thereโs a documentary quality to many of the filmโs long, cut-up tracking shots. Like they didnโt block the scenes super tightly and what is happening in front of the camera is happening for real. Itโs fantastic craft, and I contribute towards it a lot of the movieโs success, in partnership with the performances of course.
Jockey is great. Plain and simple. Clifton Collins Jr. is acting circles around this thing and deserves every bit of that Sundance Best Actor award he picked up for it. I have some nagging issues with some of the heavy-handed inspiration from The Rider, but it doesnโt take away from how wonderful this movie is on its own. As soon as this becomes available, give this thing a buy or a rent. Itโs something special.
Review
Rating
RN Review of Jockey
As soon as this becomes available, give this thing a buy or a rent. Itโs something special.