After “Weekend” and “45 Years,” we’ll pretty much watch anything Andrew Haigh does, which is why “Lean On Pete” has been a film we’ve been eagerly awaiting. Now, it’s set to unspool in Venice and Telluride, and the first taste of the film has landed.
Based on the book by Willy Vlautin, and starring Charlie Plummer, Steve Buscemi, and Chloë Sevigny, the story revolves around a young boy seeking stability in his life, who finds communion and something to care for in a horse. Here’s the official synopsis:
Lean On Pete follows fifteen-year-old Charley Thompson. He wants a home, food on the table and a high school he can attend for more than part of the year. As the son of a single father working in warehouses across the Pacific Northwest, stability is hard to find. Hoping for a new start they move to Portland, Oregon, where Charley takes a summer job, with a washed-up horse trainer, and befriends a failing racehorse named Lean on Pete.
As Haigh reveals in his director’s statement for the film, it was the source material’s humanity and hope that drew him to the project:
Lean On Pete by Willy Vlautin is a wonderfully humane novel. It is a story of a kid that refuses to lose hope or heart despite the harsh realities of his world. I found it immensely moving, tender and yet never sentimental. I wanted the film to have the same sense of purity. I wanted the film to look at life on the margins of society with honesty and respect. There was a quote that Willy used at the start of his novel by John Steinbeck which reads: “It is true that we are weak and sick and ugly and quarrelsome but if that is all we ever were, we would millenniums ago have disappeared from the face of the earth”. I tried to keep that sentiment close to my heart throughout making of this film.
You’ll have our verdict on “Lean On Pete” soon. For now, check out the clip and some new photos below.