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Cowboys review — waking up the western

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Buckle up, kids it s time for a road trip: BRIAN VINER reviews End Of Sentence

Verdict: Never the Twain Rating: Only in the past few years have strained parent-child relationships been quite such a propulsive force in cinematic storytelling. The subject has always popped up here and there. But now, you can t get away from mothers or fathers and their offspring either losing each other, or finding each other, or doing a little of both. This week it s the dominant theme in no fewer than three new films. One of them even plays it partly for laughs. Estrangement and abandonment, they re the new Laurel and Hardy. And each film also has a road trip or significant journey of some kind at its heart, almost as if they ve all been workshopped as part of a film-school project.

Cowboys was worthy but I wasn t transfixed

★★★☆☆ TRANSGENDER issues have never been as prominent as they are now – which makes director Anna Kerrigan’s Cowboys very timely indeed. Set in the western US state of Montana, it tells the story of 11-year-old Joe (Sasha Knight) and his desperate battle to persuade his small-town and somewhat small-minded mum Sally (Jillian Bell) that he is not a girl. 3 There are hugely touching moments in this gentle film that shines a light on an issue happening to loving, decent parents Joe has better luck with dad Troy (Steve Zahn), who is a bearded, plaid-shirt-wearing cowboy, but is surprisingly accepting when he is told, “I’m born in the wrong body”.

BRIAN VINER reviews End Of Sentence

BRIAN VINER reviews End Of Sentence Brian Viner For The Daily Mail © Provided by Daily Mail MailOnline logo E Rating: Verdict: Never the Twain 2/5 Only in the past few years have strained parent-child relationships been quite such a propulsive force in cinematic storytelling. The subject has always popped up here and there. But now, you can t get away from mothers or fathers and their offspring either losing each other, or finding each other, or doing a little of both. This week it s the dominant theme in no fewer than three new films. One of them even plays it partly for laughs.

Cowboys: Questions of identity in macho America

Cowboys: Questions of identity in macho America Film review: Strong performances carry this good-hearted road movie Film Title: Cowboys Genre: Drama Anna Kerrigan makes some admirable choices in her treatment of a child going through gender transition – a hot topic if ever there was one. It is Sally (Jillian Bell), the hard-working, caring mother, who wonders if young Joe (Sasha Knight) might not just be playing out. Who wouldn’t want to become a man in this patriarchal environment? “I don’t let her go out of the house like that,” she says of her “tomboy”, who has taken to jeans and cowboy hats. It is deadbeat dad Troy (Steve Zahn), a drunk with a line in hopeless fantasy, who takes the child’s aspirations seriously. Joe feels as if an alien has dumped him in a girl’s body. Not much at home in the world himself, Troy makes a connection that Sally at first can’t manage.

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