Movie Review: ‘East Of Wall’

by | Aug 14, 2025 | Featured Post, Movie Reviews, Movies | 0 comments


Greetings again from the darkness. Kate Beecroft’s first feature film as writer-director can be accurately described as a biographical-drama, yet we can’t help but wonder if a straight documentary could have been equally interesting. In no way is that meant as a criticism of the film, it’s just that most of the cast (with only a couple of exceptions) is made up of non-actors playing versions of their real-life selves … and each one of them holds our attention, leaving us wanting to know even more.

Tabatha Zimiga is a tough-looking mom who runs a 3000 acre horse farm near the Badlands of South Dakota. She’s a horse trainer and trader, and is known as a ‘horse whisperer’ (her abilities are so renowned, some even jokingly refer to her as a witch). The auction prices on her horses have dropped recently, adding stress to Tabatha’s existence. Not only did her husband die, leaving her to run the farm, but she’s also the one who welcomes local kids to live at her place when things don’t go well at their own home. As noted by the signs of blight in the area, poverty is commonplace, and some folks can’t handle the added burden of kids. In fact, Tabatha currently has seven teenagers and her own three-year-old son to care for – so the reduced price for horses puts many in peril.

One of the teenagers is Tabatha’s fourteen-year-old daughter, Porshia, a champion rider who markets the horses on TikTok … while also going through the moods of a teenager who no longer has her dad. Also on the farm are Tabatha’s mother Tracey (played by the always excellent Jennifer Ehle, SAINT MAUD, 2019) and Tabatha’s boyfriend Clay. Tracey seems best suited to smart-aleck remarks as she brews her own moonshine. Tabatha calmly and firmly runs the show, knowing full well how dependent the kids are on her.

After one of the auctions, Roy Waters (Scoot McNairy, A COMPLETE UNKNOWN, 2024), a cocky rancher from Fort Worth, Texas makes an offer to Tabatha. He will buy the ranch and allow her and the kids to continue living and working there to build the horse trading business. He recognizes the value in having a horse whisperer of Tabatha’s caliber. One can imagine how angry this makes Porshia, as it’s the only home she’s ever known, and the farm carries all memories of her late father. It’s here where the film slips a bit, as the interaction between Tabatha, Porshia, and Roy seems a bit clunky, leaving us to fill in a few too many gaps.

Cinematographer Austin Shelton does a terrific job at capturing the unique terrain of the area, as well as the near chaos of the energetic kids. Periodically, the music is a bit too strong for the scene, but there is something true and honest here as we ask ourselves, “what makes a family?” It certainly seems like Tabatha knows.

The film opens on August 15, 2025

David Ferguson
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