Ride Like A Girl Review – A Horse With No Mane

October 22, 2019
Ride Like A Girl
Ride Like A Girl - A Horse With No Mane
6/10

Summary

Ride Like A Girl

Director: Rachel Griffiths

Cast: Teresa Palmer, Sam Neill, Sullivan Stapleton, Stevie Payne, Genevieve Morris

Running time: 98 mins

Censor: PG, Coarse language

TOBY WOOLLASTON’s Ride Like a Girl review discovers a film about Australia’s first winning female jockey, one that’s a bit sloppy in the saddle.

Ride Like A Girl Review
Ride Like A Girl

The Melbourne Cup is one of the more glamorous events on the world’s sporting calendar. A sport of small margins, jockeying specifically, requiring a delicate balance of weight management, knowledge, skill, and perhaps most importantly determination – something Michelle Payne, Melbourne Cup’s first female jockey winner, had in spades.

However, prior to her win in 2015, she couldn’t seem to catch the eye of the male-dominated horseracing fraternity. Considering it’s a job that seemingly suits gender parity (arguably even favouring a female’s slighter frame), it’s a travesty that female jockeys had been cast into the margins for so long.

Ride Like A Girl Review
Ride Like A Girl

Saddling up in her first feature as director, Rachel Griffiths tells Michelle’s true story of frustration and success. Since playing the tumultuous Rhonda Epinstalk in Muriels Wedding, Griffiths has had an exhaustive number of roles, suggesting directing to be the next logical step, and as I found in my Ride Like A Girl review, the fledgling director has quite understandably held the reins rather tightly.

The music swells at all the right moments, telling you how you should feel, and the dialogue is, well… safe. The result is a movie that hits you with a good dollop of feel-good vibes but occasionally feels a little by-the-numbers.

Ride Like A Girl

Palmer As Michelle

Teresa Palmer (Hacksaw Ridge) gives a dedicated performance as Michelle, and our very own granddad of cinema, Sam Neill, chips in with a solid turn as Michelle’s beleaguered father (he had 10 children!) He even gives our 1982 winner, Kiwi, a mention and, yes, Phar Lap. No mention of pavlovas, though.

Despite some deficiencies (loose editing and questionable scripting), this is far from McLeod’s Daughters on horseback, with Griffiths exhibiting a few nice formal flourishes that demonstrate her potential as director.

Ride Like A Girl Review – Summary

My Ride Like A Girl review can tell you that it’s a satisfying crowd-pleaser that does what it says on the tin, and if you bridle your expectations before the cinema lights dim, you’ll be off and racing.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QJTZsCG7kv0

Toby is currently a film reviewer for the New Zealand Herald and NZME’s regional media. A film enthusiast since Alien made him shit his pants as a nine-year-old, Toby recently completed a Masters thesis on the phenomenology of the cinema of Darren Aronofsky. So he is well qualified to tell you that phenomenology is a load of boring bollocks… but Aronofsky is quite interesting.

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