Rodeo, the national sport of Texas, has its roots in the cowboy's daily tasks of
cutting, roping, and horse-breaking, but no one is sure how its most popular event,
bullriding, came to be. As one interviewee in this short but engrossing documentary
observes, "Ridin' bulls wasn't part of a cowboy's job. It musta been that one
day, one of 'em just said to another: 'Bet ah can stay on that bull longer'n you
can.'" (Pause for female readers to formulate behavioral theories based upon
male grey matter residing in non-cranial locales.) But regardless why they do it,
one has to concede that it takes guts for a man to climb aboard an enraged 2,000-pound
animal whose tennis ball-sized brain is fixed upon the mission of bucking him off
and trampling him into redneck tartar. And when the filmmakers turn their cameras
on their subjects (including former world champs Don Gay, Harry Tompkins, and Tuf
Hedeman, and young studs Brian Herman and Ronny Kitchens), it becomes abundantly
clear how unique these guys are. If you've never been to a rodeo before, the hair-raising
bullriding footage will leave you ashen and gasping for breath. Even longtime fans
will gain fresh insight from the slow-mo sequences showing the uncanny motor skills
these cowboys draw upon in their eight-second wars with the rampaging beasts. Interviews
with veteran riders, all of whom clearly regard themselves as the reigning mack daddies
of the sport, eventually yield the insight that bullriders are more than just the
suicidal adrenaline junkies they first appear to be. Few people can be content in
life without facing and overcoming their own fears, and every time out of the chute,
a bullrider confronts the ultimate fear. Poignant interviews with the family of Austin
champion bullrider Brent Thurman, who was killed by a bull in 1994, sensitively reinforce
-- even if they don't fully explain -- the cowboy's no-regrets philosophy. But this
film doesn't obsess on the sport's dangers or over-intellectualize its visceral thrills.
Mostly, it's content to vividly frame the explosive energy of its subject matter
with an efficient, no-frills presentation. In its final third, it reports on the
cowboys' canny move to capitalize more upon their short, risky careers by creating
a pro tour and megabucks tourneys replete with Vegas trappings and six-figure purses.
In its unpretentious way, this is a splendid piece of sociological reporting by Austin
filmmakers Fraley and Lynch, providing insights into not only human psychology but
modern capitalism and pop culture as well. And, not least, it introduces viewers
to the first bovine superstar of the Nineties: Bodacious, the baddest, most charismatic
rodeo bull on the planet. At one point during Chasing the Dream, a publicist vows
that Big Bo's glowering visage will soon greet every Web surfer and TV viewer in
the land. Catch him now while he's hot.
3.5 stars
--Russell Smith
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