Documentary about the pioneering 1970s Zephyr skating team.Documentary about the pioneering 1970s Zephyr skating team.Documentary about the pioneering 1970s Zephyr skating team.
- Awards
- 7 wins & 6 nominations total
Steve Freidman
- Surfer
- (archive footage)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I'm sure glad I finally took the time to rent and watch this documentary! It really brings back a lot of fond memories of skateboarding when I was a surfer kid back in the early seventies. Everything in this movie was familiar to me, the surfing, the skating, the names of the skaters, the equipment they were riding. As I watched all these kids ripping and doing the moves we strived so hard to emulate, I could feel the old stoke returning to my veins. Peralta (a great skater himself) really captures the electricity and energy of the time and the place. I'm 47 years old now, but after seeing this movie I'm so fired up I think I may have to get a board and get back out there (wearing a helmet and lots of pads, of course).
This documentary struck a great emotional chord with me. Just reminded me of what it felt like to be a kid in the 70s trying to figure out who you were. Yeah, the men/women talk about their teenage selves like they were superheroes - but that's exactly how I like to remember those years in my life, too. ;) And I didn't do anything quite as cool as those kids did.
I love this movie because it shows the people and the developing sport of skateboarding as being truly products of their environment. Where you grow up, what you see, and who you hang with - these things create you. It was great to see people looking back on that, acknowledging it, accepting it, and taking pride in it. Yeah, maybe a little too much pride in some cases...
Interesting to see where everyone ended up at the end.
Oh, and a good soundtrack.
I bought the movie and will watch it many times over the years, I'm sure.
I love this movie because it shows the people and the developing sport of skateboarding as being truly products of their environment. Where you grow up, what you see, and who you hang with - these things create you. It was great to see people looking back on that, acknowledging it, accepting it, and taking pride in it. Yeah, maybe a little too much pride in some cases...
Interesting to see where everyone ended up at the end.
Oh, and a good soundtrack.
I bought the movie and will watch it many times over the years, I'm sure.
A close-up look at the birth of skate board culture in Southern California, Dogtown and Z-Boys has attitude to burn, just like the sport it documents. Directed by Stacy Peralta, one of the legends of the sport, it captures the punk rock spirit of skate boarding, and perfectly places it into context within the boundaries of time (the 1970s) and location (a neighbourhood between Santa Monica and Venice, California). Even if you are not a fan you'll be fascinated by the story, which is told using a combination of narration, stills, great vintage 1970s skate boarding footage and new interviews with all the key players. Sean Penn provides the narration, and adds a flair all of his own. The opposite of stodgy, Penn speaks to the audience not at them, sounding like someone sitting at a bar telling the tale. At one point in mid-sentence he coughs, pauses for a moment and then continues. It's this kind of approach that gives this movie its edge.
I never surfed or skateboarded but I still found this documentary fascinating. I accidentally stumbled on it while channel surfing (not sidewalk surfing) and watched it a second time later in the day. The Z-Boys made me think of the early days of rock and roll when young kids with no formal musical training basically "invented" rock and roll as they went along.. It seems the Z-Boys did the same with skateboarding.
I have seen this movie twice now on cable. The first time I saw it, it caught me by suprise. The skaters I was seeing were the guys we followed in the pages of Skateboarder magazine back in the late 70's. These were the guys we copied and tried to become while skating. I am glad that a film was finally made that gives an accurate account of how it all came to be. I am almost 40 years old now and I guess a pretty uptight kind of guy with all of life's problems, however; this film did a great job of taking me back. Back to the vacant pools, the backyard halfpipes and the road trips to Cherry Hill NJ. I suspect that in order to really understand this movie and appreciate it, you had to live it. Otherwise, it probably won't have the impact on you as it did me. But for those of you (and you know who you are), who did live it, you know exactly what I am talking about! In any event, I don't care who you are, if you get a chance to see this movie...do it! I give thanks to the Z-Boys of Dogtown for the memories of my youth and thanks to Stacy for making this movie! JOB WELL DONE!
Did you know
- GoofsA brief shot of a news article/photo of the Z-Boys is flopped (so that the text is backwards).
- Quotes
Skip Engblom: Children took the ruins of the 20th century and made art out of it.
- Crazy creditsEmpty backyard pools & pool skateboarding for sound recordings by Toby Burger.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 2002 IFP/West Independent Spirit Awards (2002)
- SoundtracksSeasons of Wither
Performed by Aerosmith
Written by Steven Tyler
Courtesy of Columbia Records
By Arrangement with Sony Music Licensing
- How long is Dogtown and Z-Boys?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Парни на скейтах
- Filming locations
- Venice, Los Angeles, California, USA(Location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,300,682
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $103,355
- Apr 28, 2002
- Gross worldwide
- $1,523,214
- Runtime
- 1h 31m(91 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content