In an era of CGI-laden blockbusters and franchise filmmaking, Jeff Nichols’ The Bikeriders arrives as a greasy, gasoline-soaked time capsule. More than just a movie about motorcycles, it is a mournful, lyrical study of a specific American subculture at the precise moment it traded authenticity for spectacle.
Fans of The Irishman , Hell or High Water , and anyone who has ever romanticized a leather jacket. The Bikeriders
Loosely based on Danny Lyon’s 1968 photobook of the same name, Nichols’ film doesn’t just adapt a book; it adapts a feeling . It captures the romance of the open road and the inevitable, violent crash of that romance against the hard asphalt of reality. The film is framed through the lens of Danny (Mike Faist), a young photographer documenting the Chicago chapter of a fictional 1960s motorcycle club, the Vandals. He interviews Kathy (Jodie Comer), the sharp-tongued, no-nonsense wife of Benny (Austin Butler), the club’s silent, charismatic wild card. In an era of CGI-laden blockbusters and franchise