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Dogtown and Z-Boys [Blu-ray] by Stacy Peralta
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DVD Cover InformationActor: Bob Biniak, Jay Adams, Jeff Ament, Sean Penn, Tony Alva Director: Stacy Peralta Brand: Sony Producer: Glen E. Friedman Writer: Stacy Peralta Producer: Agi Orsi Producer: Christine Triano Producer: Daniel Ostroff Producer: Debra MacCulloch Writer: Craig Stecyk Blu-ray: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Unknown); English (Subtitled); English (Original Language) Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Full Screen, Subtitled Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 91 minutes Blu-ray Release Date: 2010-01-05 Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Movie Reviews of Dogtown and Z-Boys [Blu-ray]Movie Review: Excellent Even If You're Not a Boarder Summary: 5 Stars
This movie is an excellent story of kids who just happen to be there for a moment when what they do changes things. They happen to create a national craze, and some of them benefit while others don't. The story of how this happened, and what it's like to be at ground zero at a special moment, is what the movie's really about. It could have been some other sport, or not a sport at all -- the skateboarding is great, of course, but the point is the time. Don't let a lack of interest in skateboarding keep you from seeing this movie!
Summary of Dogtown and Z-Boys [Blu-ray]Meet the Z-Boys - a group of brash street kids from Venice, California's tough Dogtown neighborhood who revolutionized skateboarding with an aggressive in-your-face style that shredded the competition and totally influenced today's extreme sports.
Narrated by SEAN PENN and featuring old-school skating footage, a blistering soundtrack and riveting interviews with skateboarding icons TONY ALVA, JAY ADAMS and TONY HAWK, this award-winning documentary is a historic, no-holds-barred, behind-the-scenes look at the birth of a cultural phenomenon, and the inspiration for the thrilling feature film LORDS OF DOGTOWN.
In the early 1970s, a group of young surfers from a tough neighborhood south of Santa Monica took up skateboards and offhandedly changed the world. At least it appears so after watching Dogtown and Z-Boys, a documentary about how twelve "Z-Boys" (including one girl) resuscitated a dead sport and created a lifestyle that spread infectiously to become a worldwide counterculture phenomenon, namely high-flying "vert" (i.e. vertical) skateboarding and punk rock abandon. Director Stacy Peralta, one of the original Z-Boys, and Craig Steyck, the photographer whose publicity first made them famous, would have you believe that with empty pools as their springboard, the clan single-handedly carved a niche that grew into what is now referred to as "extreme sports" (snowboarding seems particularly implicated). Degrees of accuracy aside, the hoard of original footage Peralta and Steyck have access to makes for an engaging portrait of "accidental revolutionaries" whose mythology as expressed by themselves (all but one of the original crew give extensive interviews) and those they influenced (including Henry Rollins, Jeff Ament of Pearl Jam, and Sean Penn, who narrates) is far more entertaining than any evenhanded version could ever hope to be. --Fionn Meade
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