Hartford Courant

Jake Burton alive and bristling in documentar­y ‘Dear Rider’

- By Eddie Pells

People who know the sport — really know it — will tell you that the best snowboardi­ng movies are those that never let you get too comfortabl­e.

That might explain how “Dear Rider” could very well end up in that category, even though nobody dropped out of a helicopter or plunged off a cliff to make this film.

Instead, the best storytelli­ng in the documentar­y about snowboardi­ng icon Jake Burton, who died in 2019 after a relapse of testicular cancer, comes from the nimble stitching together of decades of home movies and archival media interviews to paint a well-rounded portrait of the man who saw a sport in that undefined slab of fiberglass and forever changed life on the mountain.

In large part because Burton had been plotting out the movie of his life story well before his death, and knew exactly where he wanted to go with it, much of the fluff that might have accompanie­d such a project so soon after his passing never makes the cut. A lot of the hard truth of what it took to build a snowboardi­ng empire, then leave it behind too soon, comes to light in this 90-minute film, which debuts Nov. 9 on HBO.

What results is a movie that is, no doubt, an homage to Burton. But it also serves as a history lesson about a pastime that became a sport in the late 1970s when Burton quit his Wall Street job to produce snowboards in his garage in Vermont. It’s a lesson that does not shirk from the uncomforta­ble realities of his undertakin­g: Yes, he built it for fun, freedom and who-givesa-crap rebellion, but no

billion-dollar industry sprouts up purely on good vibes and bro hugs.

Some of the most enlighteni­ng moments revolve around the sport’s first superstar, Craig Kelly, and his role in the business side’s first major rivalry, between Burton and another snowboard maker, Tom Sims.

It includes backbiting and lawsuits, while also touching on Burton’s potentiall­y career-killing miscalcula­tions at the sport’s outset.

It is instructiv­e, not always easy to watch. And while Sims, who died in 2012, would certainly have had a different take on many of these events, the fact this unvarnishe­d portrayal of the main subject makes it into the movie at all is a testament to what Burton, his wife, Donna, and his son, George, were trying to do with this project.

“He was a very resilient man, but the more we could honestly show what his demons were, what his struggles were, and then show how he overcame them, that was always our focus,” said director Fernando Villena.

The documentar­y shows Burton growing as a man while his snowboard becomes both a

sport and an industry. He accepts the Olympics and marvels that his invention helped produce a champion such as Shaun White, whose two Rolling Stone magazine covers essentiall­y cemented the sport’s acceptance into the mainstream.

Lest anyone get too comfortabl­e, the last 25 minutes of this movie are mostly sad but partly uplifting. Dozens of family photos and film clips follow Burton as he overcomes cancer, then a paralyzing autoimmune disease, then another bout with cancer that takes him away just as the snow starts falling in the late fall of 2019.

The old snapshots and film clips of Burton — sometimes sneering, always bristling, never afraid to challenge the snobby ski suits in America and across Europe — are a stark reminder of how much work it took to elbow out room for himself and his baggy-panted die-hards on the mountain.

Years passed and Burton Snowboards, always privately owned, branched out and became a behemoth that many in the industry thought was too big. The movie doesn’t flinch from this topic, either.

 ?? ALDEN PELLETT/AP ?? Jake Burton, owner of Burton Snowboards who died in 2019, displays snowboard models in 2002.
ALDEN PELLETT/AP Jake Burton, owner of Burton Snowboards who died in 2019, displays snowboard models in 2002.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States