
Ride Like A Girl is a new kind of fairytale film.
At least, that’s how the movie’s director and producer Rachel Griffiths has always seen it, and while it’s light on the dragons and castles there is a certain kind of magic that comes with the story of Michelle Payne, the first-ever female jockey to win the Melbourne Cup.
Ride Like A Girl charts Michelle’s story from her days as a little girl with the seemingly impossible dream to one day win the race that stops the nation. While the physical strength and mental labour that goes into becoming one of the nation’s top jockeys is told through a series of action-packed scenes and heartwrenching moments, at its heart Ride Like A Girl is very much a compelling story about family.
Just like her real-life counterpart, the film’s Michelle (played by Teresa Palmer) is the youngest of ten children, all being raised in a loving but wildly chaotic horse-racing obsessed home by their father Paddy Payne (Sam Neill) after her mother died when she was just six months old.
Following a family trauma and her own near-fatal horse fall, the film builds up to a spectacular finish with Michelle’s historic win at the Cup and even though you walk into the cinema knowing the eventual outcome, it’s still a wild ride to the finish.
On Mamamia’s daily podcast The Spill hosts Laura Brodnik and Kee Reece talk about the importance of Ride Like A Girl along with the biggest entertainment and pop culture stories of the day.
For Rachel Griffiths, she knew from the moment she watched Michelle cross the finish line that her story was destined to be a feature film.