The Longest Ride manages to make bull riding seem tedious (2024)

The Longest Ride is a tale about a square-jawed, bull-riding, North Carolina cowboy named Luke Collins (Scott Eastwood) and a relationship that changes him.

This emotional journey teaches him about sacrifice, priorities, and the heartbreaking decisions you must make when choosing between what you want and what you love. He has undeniable chemistry with his costar, chemistry that's as gripping as any you'll find in any romantic movie in recent years.

Rating

2

To be clear here, I’m not talking about Sophia (Britt Robertson), the girl he falls in love with.

I’m talking about a bull named Rango (Rango). Luke is willing to throw away his life for eight seconds on Rango’s back, a testament to his dangerous love of bull riding and the source material of author and love genie Nicholas Sparks. For those who aren’t regular Sparks readers, Luke’s tale has been adapted for film from the book of the same name.

Though director George Tillman Jr. and screenwriter Craig Bolotin are responsible for bringing this story to the screen, The Longest Ride is still very clearly a Nicholas Sparks fever dream. There are old people dying in their sleep, an old person being read to, rain-soaked hair, rain-soaked clothes, sex scenes that begin by removing wet clothes, two good-looking white people from almost “too different” walks of life, and sexy bodies of water.

Not unlike The Notebook, The Longest Ride is like a Russian nesting doll of love stories. Luke’s love of bull riding is, of course, the biggest doll. Then we have Luke’s love of Sophia. And wrapped in their story is a saga about a Jewish couple — Ruth (Oona Chaplin) and Ira (Jack Huston) Levinson — and their struggle to start a family, whom we learn about through the letters of an older Ira (Alan Alda).

It’s an ambitious film that also wants to delve into ideas of immigration, the Holocaust, sterility, and motherhood, on top of the already insurmountable idea of bull-riding love. But the writing is shallow. And even with Alda’s help, Eastwood’s charm (and superhuman chest-to-waist ratio), and Chaplin’s inherent likability, the movie crumbles under the weight of all of these swirling topics, collapsing into a forgettable pile of saccharine dust.

The totemic power of hats and letters

The Longest Ride manages to make bull riding seem tedious (1)

(Fox)

An important thing to know about Sparks, and about the 10 filmic adaptations of his novels, is that the man is drawn to hats and handwritten letters and loves them deeply. Hats, in Sparks’s world, are symbols of love. Remember the newsboy cap Ryan Gosling’s Noah wore in The Notebook? And remember how it helped signal to Rachel McAdams’s Allie that Noah was her true love?

The same thing happens in The Longest Ride. Cowboy hats have a transformative power here, making men and women more attractive to each other. Sophia’s sorority sisters wear them to a rodeo, showing the rodeo folk they’re ready to party.

But Sophia doesn’t have one because she is a reluctant spectator. It’s a chance of wondrous fate that at the rodeo she meets Luke, and his hat is tossed off in her direction while he’s riding. He lets her keep his.

The exchange of this cowboy hat is a symbol that they’re meant to be together — this skeptical sorority girl from New Jersey and this cowboy from North Carolina. It’s a bridge for their disparate worlds. This is the glorious universe of Nicholas Sparks.

The other integral element to any Nicholas Sparks story is the power of handwritten letters. There’s a box full of them in this film. They belong to Ira Levinson, an old Jewish man who crashed his car into a tree. Sophia and Luke find him, get drenched with rain, and wiggle, Sophia especially, into his life. (I understand this sounds silly, but this all happens.)

She visits him in the hospital and, as part of a strange gambit, promises to read him letters he wrote his late wife so he can relive the sadness of their relationship, provided he promises to eat food. This does not seem a symbiotic relationship, because listening to a sorority girl complain about internships while reliving your PTSD just doesn’t seem like something an old man might seek out. But Ira apparently has unconventional desires.

It’s through these letters that Sophia figures out what love is, or what Sparks thinks love should be. Sparks is railing against the modern romance of Tinder, OkCupid, text messages, and social media stalking. Love, to Sparks and, by extension, Sophia, is a thing created by the fate of a cowboy hat and fostered by hundreds of letters.

Love is hard, even for good-looking, “different” people

The Longest Ride manages to make bull riding seem tedious (2)

(Fox)

Aside from the wonderful performance by Rango, there are no villains in The Longest Ride. It’s a lot easier to root for a couple when there’s a bad guy threatening to tear them apart. Sometimes it’s a dad who doesn’t want his daughter to date a ruffian. It might be a mom who doesn’t want her son to ruin his college scholarship. Perhaps it’s another suitor.

This film has none of those.

Instead, the villains of this film are Sophia and Luke’s disparate backgrounds. Even though the two are devastatingly good-looking, white, relatively privileged, pleasant, altruistic, nice to old people, only children, and have lived in the same state for four years, the film strains to make clear how “different” they are.

“The reason I like you is because you’re nothing like everyone else,” Luke tells Sophia.

Never mind that Sophia is part of a sorority (with a really nice house) where she ostensibly shares something in common with her sisters, or the fact that most of the characters and extras in this film are also white.

Sophia is given qualities that are supposed to make her different — she loves art and is the daughter of Polish immigrants. These tweaks are superficial, though. Sophia’s first-generation experience is a slapdash, throwaway line in a bar — it’s just a prelude to a first kiss. And there’s no sense that this immigrant experience shapes the way she sees the world. Her love for art is treated the same way — in that we never really see the “why” behind it.

“This is what I do,” Luke tells Sophia near the end of the movie. It’s supposed to explain his unflinching stupidity for wanting to ride a bull. But it’s also a fitting reminder that there isn’t any logic behind Luke and Sophia’s characters. They just do.

Oona Chaplin and Scott Eastwood are undeniably charming

The Longest Ride manages to make bull riding seem tedious (3)

(Fox)

The film boasts a cast filled with scions of Hollywood royalty. Oona Chaplin is Charlie Chaplin’s granddaughter and Eugene O’Neill’s great-granddaughter. Scott Eastwood calls Clint dad. And Jack Huston has a family tree full of actors and directors.

The inevitable question surrounding the movie, then, is: Can these stars’ offspring act?

Perhaps that’s not an entirely fair question, given the weak material in The Longest Ride. But Chaplin rises above the rest as the indomitable Holocaust refugee Ruth. Ruth is optimistic, and spends most of the movie lowering her shoulder to the grindstone with the promise that things get better. Ruth is a one-note character, but Chaplin, blessed with bright, anime eyes, gives her a grace and poise that ultimately elevate her.

Eastwood, who looks like he’s been genetically engineered by movie executives who wanted an even better-looking Chris Evans, has a tougher role as Luke. Like Ruth, the character of Luke isn’t much to work with — he rides bulls and has trouble with love. But Eastwood is vulnerable in parts, and better than you think he’ll be.

Alda, the grandfather of this group of pretty young Hollywood things, plays crusty old Ira. Like the other old characters you find in Nicholas Sparks movies, Ira is magical because he teaches humans how to love. He’s a bit like a romantic Yoda, imparting love wisdom until his dying day. Alda does his best with what he’s given, lending the film much-needed glimmers of comedy.

Unfortunately, Chaplin’s brilliance, Alda’s funny crustiness, and Eastwood’s vulnerability aren’t enough to keep this film afloat. It lumbers along, determined to show that love isn’t effortless. Love is listening to someone prattle on about how their unpaid internship at an art gallery is more important than you. Love is going to a gallery with said person and hating every moment of it. Love is dragging an old guy out of a burning car, and then talking to him about his dead wife for the next month.

And that’s why some people take up bull riding.

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The Longest Ride manages to make bull riding seem tedious (2024)

FAQs

What is the 8 second rule in bull riding? ›

In today's Professional Bull Riders (PBR) circuit, a cowboy spends a great deal of time preparing to manage just eight seconds. It's the amount of time a bull rider must stay on the bull to receive a score. For eight frantic seconds, the bull riders can't touch their free hand to the bull or to themselves.

Is the bull riding in The Longest Ride real? ›

Bulls were transported to set and flags were used to herd bulls through the chutes. In the rodeo scenes featuring bull riding, all the riders were PBRs and the bulls were accustomed to this type of action. The actors were never riding the bulls (we only see the actors sitting on the bulls in the chutes).

What Bull Rider is The Longest Ride about? ›

That was one of the biggest challenges that awaited Scott Eastwood, who plays the role of Luke Collins, in the upcoming film “The Longest Ride.” Collins is a former champion bull rider that is looking to make a comeback.

How did they film the bull scenes in The Longest Ride? ›

All Scott Eastwood wanted to do was cowboy up. He spent months with professional bull riders, learning how to play one in The Longest Ride. He mastered how to talk like a bull rider and how to move like one, and he filmed scenes atop real, top-level bucking bulls inside solid steel bucking chutes.

Has anyone ride bodacious for 8 seconds? ›

Bodacious already had a reputation when he and Hedeman faced off in 1993. After failing to ride him the required 8 seconds on two occasions, Hedeman rode Bodacious for a masterful, near perfect 95 points in November 1993.

Why do bulls go crazy in bull riding? ›

Cattle are prey animals and their reaction to being ridden in this way is the same as their reaction to being attacked by a predator, a situation where they experience increased fear, stress and panic. The 'fight-or-flight' response is a survival instinct which the animal is unable to consciously control.

Did Scott Eastwood actually ride Bulls in The Longest Ride? ›

In The Longest Ride, based on the Nicholas Sparks' novel, Scott Eastwood plays a bull-riding champion, though the man himself didn't do his own stunts. He did, however, take it upon himself to ride a bull off set. Eastwood confirms this fact via Instagram, mentioning that he 'forgot' to tell the producers.

Has anyone ever had a perfect bull ride? ›

The only perfect score in bull riding was achieved by Wade Leslie in 1991! For three decades, some riders have come close to achieving a 100, but no one else has ever made it (the average score for a rider is around 80.

Has a bull rider ever gotten a 100? ›

Wolfman is known for being ridden by Wade Leslie for a perfect 100 point score, the only one in history in any rodeo circuit. This happened in 1991 and it greatly enhanced owner Growney Brothers with most of the credit going to Don Kish.

How many rides has Bodacious killed? ›

In four years, Bodacious was virtually unrideable. All muscle, the bull with the distinctive yellow coloring bucked off 127 of his 135 riders and became known for a bone-crushing style that sent many riders to the hospital, including world champions Tuff Hedeman and Terry Don West.

What PBR bulls have never been ridden? ›

He had never been ridden in competition and had bucked Frost off at the 1985 National Finals Rodeo (NFR) and again at the 1986 NFR. This kept Lane from riding all 10 of his finals bulls in 1986 and from winning the World Championship that year.

Why can't Ira have kids in The Longest Ride? ›

They go through the standard Southern courtship (the movie is set in North Carolina), with the bombing of Pearl Harbor Ira's cue to enlist. While in battle, he suffers a severe wound. To make matters worse, he develops an infection which renders him sterile.

What famous bull rider was killed by a bull? ›

The bull then turned, knocked Frost over, pressed his right horn on Frost's back, and pushed him against the muddy arena floor. Frost initially rose to his feet, took a couple of steps, waved for help, and then fell to the ground; dying on the arena floor from massive internal injuries. He was 25 years old.

What bull rider got his face smashed? ›

Hedeman managed to walk out of the arena, but required several hours of reconstructive surgery for his face. The wreck resulted in Hedeman permanently losing his sense of smell and taste. He spent less than two months recuperating, and at the NFR later that year, he drew Bodacious again— this time, in Round 7.

What happened to the 14 year old bull rider? ›

STOKES COUNTY, N.C. – A 14-year-old bull rider died while participating in a North Carolina rodeo Saturday. Bull rider Denim Bradshaw went into cardiac arrest after he fell off a bucking bull, WFMY reported.

What is the 8 second rodeo rule? ›

The rider must attempt to stay on the bull for at least eight seconds, while only touching the bull with their riding hand. The other hand must remain free for the duration of the ride. Originally, the rules required a 10-second ride, but that was changed to the current eight seconds.

Did the PBR change the 8 second rule? ›

In what is being called the most significant rule change in the history of pro bull riding, PBR today reduced the length of time required for a qualified bull ride from 8 to 6 seconds.

Why do bull riders only go for 8 seconds? ›

After eight seconds the bull or the horse loses adrenaline, it gets tired and its bucking ability decreases. Eight seconds is also considered the performance sweet spot for a horse or bull and rider to produce a high-scoring ride. At first, the sport had no time limit. The rider would stay on as long as he could.

Who rode the bulls in 8 seconds? ›

Stephen Baldwin: Stephen Baldwin played the role of Tuff Hedeman in the 1994 biographical film titled "8 Seconds." This movie is based on the life of Lane Frost, a champion bull rider, and Tuff Hedeman, his close friend and fellow bull rider.

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