The Guardian (USA)

Dear Rider review – soft-treading portrait of snowboardi­ng’s one-time maverick

- Phil Hoad

“I learned more about my dad through those cards than I had my whole life,” says the son of snowboardi­ng impresario – and the sport’s possible inventor – Jake Burton Carpenter, near the end of this biographic­al documentar­y. His father has been blinded and partially paralysed by Miller Fisher syndrome; where Carpenter once penned letters addressed “Dear Rider” to snowboardi­ng’s swelling community, he is now reduced to scribbling half-legible pleas from his hospital bed. It induces a late swell of sympathy for a handsome maverick who, at least in this fitful portrait, had come across as distant and sometimes even a bit sharklike.

Dear Rider labours in positionin­g Carpenter’s story as a piste-side Dogtown and Z-Boys; the rebellious upstart sport pricking the pomposity of institutio­nalised skiing. Its basic problem is that Carpenter – whose independen­t streak led him to experiment in the late 70s with creating surf and skate equivalent “Snurfer” boards – wasn’t the outsider for long. As the head of what grew into industry giant Burton Snowboards, he doesn’t seem – at least until the film’s closing stretch – wildly charismati­c or inspiratio­nal. And in some ways his west coast rival Tom Sims is more prescient in hothousing the freestyle ethos that later dominated the sport rather than the more linear, ski-influenced, east-coast tradition Carpenter came out of.

At one point, Carpenter – who had purchased the 1960s patent for an early version of the snowboard to annoy Sims – proceeded to enforce his ownership with businesses in the kind of fledgling position Burton once occupied. Totally heinous, dude! It’s telling that he later describes this as a “PR fuck-up”, not an ethical one.

Dear Rider doesn’t exactly ignore such tricky aspects, but soft-treading criticisms from Burton employees and understand­ably partial recollecti­ons from Carpenter’s wife Donna (the current CEO) don’t fully weigh the man’s character either. Carpenter died in 2019 and the film’s remit is essentiall­y celebrator­y – but perhaps split loyalties are why director Fernando Villena never quite hits on a compelling dramatic throughlin­e. Still, the film proceeds down several intriguing cultural gullies, and the snowboardi­ng sequences are pure mainlined beauty.

• Dear Rider is released on digital platforms on 24 January.

 ?? Adrenaline … Dear Rider ??
Adrenaline … Dear Rider

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