San Diego Union-Tribune

BACK IN THE SADDLE

HORSE-RACING DRAMA ‘JOCKEY’ FOCUSES ON THE TOLL THE JOB TAKES ON A VETERAN RIDER’S MIND AND BODY

- BY MANOHLA DARGIS Dargis writes for The New York Times.

Movies about old warriors often follow a wellthumbe­d playbook. The hero — often an athlete, though sometimes a soldier, cowboy, outlaw or spy and almost inevitably a guy — wearily shakes off the dust, girds his loins and faces the next, perhaps final chapter. And then he climbs back in the fray, the ring, the saddle. “It’s about how hard you can get hit,” in the words of Rocky Balboa, the patron saint of cinema’s comeback olds, “and keep moving forward.”

The light is beautiful in “Jockey,” an enjoyable old-warrior movie with a surprising sting, even if the bones and story are creaky. By human years, Jackson Silva (Clifton Collins Jr.), who’s meant to be in his mid-40s, isn’t all that aged. By profession­al racing standards he’s an antique. A well-respected veteran of racing’s lower ranks, Jackson works and broods at Turf Paradise, a (real) track in Arizona where thoroughbr­eds and quarter horses are stabled, trained and raced amid a hive of trainers, jockeys, grooms and miscellane­ous others.

Sentimenta­l yet also trickier and more complex than its gleaming surfaces suggest, “Jockey” is a portrait of a man facing his mortality or at least profession­al redundancy. Worn out and visibly ragged, Jackson doesn’t look like a man with a wide-open future. He’s suffering from an enigmatic, agonizing malady that affects different parts of his body though mostly his hands, which at times violently tremble, a problem given that a crop is a tool of his trade. He carefully hides his pain, or almost. But there’s no obscuring that he’s carrying some excess weight, too, another liability given that he’s already conspicuou­sly on the tall side for the job.

Movies set against the backdrop of profession­al horse racing often focus on the ride, not the rider, and the emphasis tends to be less on the animals and more on the struggles and victories of their human handlers: their owners, trainers, and kind or cruel attendants. As its title announces, “Jockey” at once follows that familiar script but also tweaks it by narrowing in on one man and, to a lesser extent, the world that he embodies. At its finest — and with help from nonprofess­ionals, including real jockeys like Logan Cormier — it brings you into shabby backrooms in which riders pray, bare scars and anxiously, excitedly, wait for the next race.

Directed by Clint Bentley, who wrote the script with Greg Kwedar, the movie doesn’t stay long in those bleak rooms. As the filmmakers announce in the first scene, a moody overture set against a prettily darkening sky, they are too romantic, just not about horse racing. They’re soft on Jackson. Counterint­uitively, the filmmakers have set their sights beyond the track and the winner’s circle, and there’s little racing or riding in the movie and not even many horses. Instead, they show you the physical toll, how this life gets into the body, shapes and changes it, and worse. They also make smart use of Collins’ eloquent face, which ebbs and flows with emotion, its creases deepening when Jackson is alone with his pain.

“Jockey” works hard not to bum you out, and to that end it studiously ignores the ugliness of contempora­ry horse racing, most notably its doping scandals and ghastly horse deaths. Instead, the movie leans into the beauty of Jackson’s world with images of towering palm trees and roaming mustangs, and with many, many scenes set in both dawning and fading light.

Like some other recent independen­t movies that take place in the more unexplored margins of life beyond the big city, “Jockey” circles around questions of individual­ism and stoicism and, by extension, how Hollywood has framed the American character. Despite all the beauty shots in the movie, the light that softens Jackson’s world also fades, replaced by a melancholy that can feel eulogistic: It’s mourning again in America. Time and again, Jackson seems inevitably headed toward the easy out, a trajectory that the filmmakers play with and, in crucial moments, complicate. He meets up with an old flame and searches for answers, lingering in a light that is invariably swallowed in shadows.

 ?? SONY PICTURES CLASSICS ?? Clifton Collins Jr. plays Jackson Silva in “Jockey,” directed and co-written by Clint Bentley.
ADOLPHO VELOSO
SONY PICTURES CLASSICS Clifton Collins Jr. plays Jackson Silva in “Jockey,” directed and co-written by Clint Bentley. ADOLPHO VELOSO

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