‘East of Wall’ review: Saddles up a sensitive docu-fiction hybrid

‘East of Wall’ review: Saddles up a sensitive docu-fiction hybrid


Any western worth its dusty boots and big-sky openness should know whatโ€™s breathtaking about freedom, at the same time grasping how being tamed is an uneasy, clarifying rite of passage. That men have typically led these stories means thereโ€™s a lot still to be mined when women tackle this genre โ€” both in front of and behind the camera โ€” and in โ€œEast of Wall,โ€ about a struggling ranch matriarch (Tabatha Zimiga) with a headstrong daughter (Porshia Zimiga), writer-director Kate Beecroft has found a worthy modern story of cowgirl hardiness near South Dakotaโ€™s Badlands.

That air of independence and restriction applies also to what โ€œEast of Wallโ€ itself is: a narrative centered on first-time actors playing versions of themselves in a story shaped from their lives, in this case the joys and sorrows of the Zimigasโ€™ open-plains existence rescuing, riding and selling horses, and dealing with financial uncertainty after the loss of a loved one.

When Chloรฉ Zhao took the docu-fiction approach with her melancholy 2017 neo-western โ€œThe Rider,โ€ the blended realism and dramatic choreography achieved something heartbreaking, reawakening the hybridโ€™s possibilities. Beecroftโ€™s solid-enough first feature isnโ€™t as effortlessly transcendent โ€” the seams show a bit more. But thereโ€™s plenty of lived-in warmth in its accumulation of details and it gives needed voice to the concerns of women forging their own way in an environment that isnโ€™t exactly kind on anyone.

Very quickly, weโ€™re swept up in whatโ€™s loose, chaotic and appealing about tough, tattooed horse whisperer Tabatha and her rough-and-tumble operation, which includes her own children โ€” Porshia is already a rising rodeo star โ€” and various teenagers from this strapped regionโ€™s broken homes, plus her hard-bitten mom (Jennifer Ehle), who enjoys her peach moonshine. Thereโ€™s an unruly found-family charm that belies whatโ€™s isolating and rundown about their situation and Austin Sheltonโ€™s vista-friendly cinematography does a good job contrasting that beauty and severity, especially in Tabatha herself, an earthy, battle-hardened goddess with a head half-shaved and half-draped with golden hair, and kind eyes rimmed with mascara. She always looks ready to calm a bronc, knock back a beer or tell you off.

Tabathaโ€™s reputation for breaking wild steeds and supporting wayward kids is legion and her sales methods lean toward the unconventional: TikTok videos that frame horses at full speed against ravishing backdrops, and at barn sales, showcases that spotlight her girlsโ€™ performing skills. Money is tight, though, and the sting of her husbandโ€™s suicide a year earlier has put a grief wedge between Tabatha and Porshia as each tries to imagine what the future holds. Thatโ€™s when an observant, dogged Texas rancher with his own baggage (Scoot McNairy) shows up with a tempting lifeline that puts everyoneโ€™s ownership of their fate in stark relief.

โ€œEast of Wallโ€ lives in that indie space of wanting to respect and vibe equally, which means thereโ€™s a little too much slo-mo montage and, considering how invested we are in this family, not enough memorable scene work. But even with the thinnest of narrative framing and some arty touches that feel superfluous, thereโ€™s an overall portrait of authentic grit and resilience here, of knowing when to hold on and when to let go, that is well-nurtured by Beecroftโ€™s admiring eye for these renegade women.

Nothing against McNairy and Ehle who play well with the first-timers, but there are moments when you wonder if Beecroft should have straight-up made a documentary, foregoing the harnessing of scripted incident for the rawness of what drew her to these people and this world in the first place. Which is another way of saying mother and daughter Zimiga are real finds, true-to-themselves keepers of a heartland tradition, and fresh faces getting to tell that story in a nontraditional form.

‘East of Wall’

Rated: R for language throughout

Running time: 1 hour, 37 minutes

Playing: In limited release

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