Lords Of Dogtown

freestyle_rich

Active member
who else thinks that this movie looks awsome? i don't skate but still think that it would be intresting. its always good to see the rebels who progress a sport

No Props!
 
hollywood-ized version of the real thing. looks like garbage. dogtown and z-boys was pretty ill

stick that in your pipe and smoke it!

-Justin

(dfp represent)


keep it real.
 
im probably gonna go see it. my brother thinks the exact same way though, just a hollywood version of dogtown and z-boys

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strangers passing in hte street by chance two separate glances meet... and i am you and what i see is me
 
the original documentary was really well done... i hope they dont screw it up.

*****************************************

-Matt

NS SKATEBOARDERS

 
lords wont come close to dogtown and z-boys. LODT is based on a true story.. wich means its full of stupid hollywood drama, where as the documentry is raw and kicks ass

i don't care as long as the bassline is pumpin / the drumline bangin away / make one move and i'll blow you away / one false move and i'll blow you away
 
yes dogtown and z-boys was a fuckin' sick movie, i don't think that this new shit can come close...

-Ira

Member No. 8857

Viva La Rèsistance

i think the hustle dance is pretty sick - DENALI44
 
Yeah man haha Grind was awesome!

Dammit Sweet Lou is my god!

Snus - a Brownish, Swedish nicotine mixture placed under the upper lip. Big with athletes, construction workers and Swedes in general.

 
I just saw an advertisement for it on yahoo.com. "Stay straight, stay punk. Play it cool, play it stupid. etc." It pisses me off, primarily, because Dogtown and Z boys was badass, a real quality film that had substance, IMO.

But Justin's right: this is grade A hollywood bullshit.

[/b]SHAKE YOUR BLOOD

 
Why are you guys judging it before you have seen it? Yes, we all understand its a HOLLYWOOD DRAMA based (probably fairly loosly) on a true story. It's meant to entertain the masses, not just skaters. Just watch the damn movie and then critique it you fools.

 
No, I'll go ahead an critique it now. Thanks for the imput though.

Ideas/films/media/etc. that is de-intensified to reach a mainstream audience is pure crap.

[/b]SHAKE YOUR BLOOD

 
i think it looks sick. Dogtown and Z-boys was pretty good, but too "documentaryish" for me. this movie will keep me attentive and whatnot. i'm stoked.

Freezing Point 32

OVO helmets

'Straight creeping on this bitch; Blonde haired chicken head.... she turned around and it was fuckin G to the Teezy." - OMAR
 
its a movie which is trying to cash in on the fact that 50% of ten year old americans have become skaters. and the sad part is, it will probably do really well in the box office because of that.

-Joel

~Phunkin Phatt Phreerider~
Capital City Rider, DFP
Silent Army


'Everybody calls me a zero. But I'm an internet hero.'
 
check out the documentary about those guys too, its awesome, that surfing style of skating should be brought back. movie looks a tad homosexual tho

 
""Watching Lords of Dogtown, I momentarily became nostalgic for the summer of 1977, when I would ride my skateboard down my inclined driveway, then see if I could make the sharp turn onto the sidewalk without wiping out. But nostalgia is hardly a reason to recommend a movie. A narrative re-telling of events previously chronicled in the documentary Dogtown and the Z-Boys (which was directed by the writer of this film, original Z-boy Stacy Peralta), Lords of Dogtown will have limited interest for those who exist outside of the skateboarding community.

The film takes us back to the 1970s in Venice, California (in an area referred to as "Dogtown"), where a bunch of beam bums turn from surfing at the rundown Pacific Ocean Pier to competition skateboarding for Zephyrs surf shop. The team, which is funded by the perpetually drunk and/or stoned Skip Engblom (Heath Ledger), features three standouts: brash Jay Adams (Emile Hirsch), showoff Tony Alva (Victor Rasuk), and introspective Stacy Peralta (John Robinson). This trio claims responsibility for re-inventing skateboarding, taking it from a relatively tame "tabletop" sport to one that goes vertical. By using drained backyard pools (during a drought period, water couldn't be spared to fill them) as practice areas, the so-called Z-Boys are transformed from poor white trash to overnight sensations.

Dramatically, Lords of Dogtown is inert. None of the characters attains three-dimensionality and the movie skips from one episode to another so fast that it's like viewing a greatest hits' collection. Catherine Hardwicke (Thirteen) invests her film with a great deal of visual style (and employs MTV editing), but it's in service of protagonists who never come alive. The real guys show more charisma in Dogtown and the Z-Boys than do the actors playing them here.

Hardwicke nails the setting. This feels like the '70s, not some filmmaker's gauzy homage to a decade that was, all things considered, pretty miserable. Strangely, because her re-creation of the time period is so uncanny and her style is frequently pseudo-documentary, there are times when I almost thought I was watching Dogtown and the Z-Boys. This version of the story doesn't stand up well to the comparison. The documentary has both more heart and energy than the re-creation.

Of the actors, Emile Hirsch and Victor Rasuk convince us that they can play jerks. John Robinson shows a moody side. Heath Ledger does a great impersonation of Val Kilmer. And Johnny Knoxville plays a sleazy promoter. Nikki Reed, who co-wrote and starred in Thirteen, is given the thankless girlfriend/sister role. Rebecca DeMornay doesn't have much more to do playing Jay's addled mother. (If makeup wasn't applied to make her look worn-down, then DeMornay has not aged well. Was Risky Business that long ago?)

Inept storytelling is one of Lords of Dogtown's great frustrations. Subplots are dropped. Romances start up, then vanish. Betrayals occur without consequences. There's a sense that more than half of the narrative was either left on the cutting room floor or never filmed. What's left is less a cohesive story than a series of episodes to propel the characters from point A to point B - and the destination doesn't impress. We end up with a manipulative denouement that is supposed to make us feel something. Unfortunately, since the character at the center of the melodrama is so poorly developed, the most heartfelt reaction Hardwicke elicits is a shrug. And that pretty much describes my response to the film as a whole. For those with real interest in the roots of this X-sport, rent the documentary and skate past this one. ""

© 2005 James Berardinelli

 
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