Movies about Skateboard
Skateboarding is a popular sport that involves performing tricks and riding on a skateboard. It is an adventurous activity where riders try to balance while performing mesmerizing tricks. Over the years, many films and documentaries have been made about the sport. Some of the greatest skateboard movies have generated massive incomes at the box office in the film industry.
The relationship between skateboards and cinema has existed for more than 50 years. Classic skateboard movies often feature the life experiences of professional skaters. Besides the entertaining aspect, the movies also help us better understand the game and its top athletes.
Best skateboard movies
Popular skate movies like Mid90s, Lords of Dogtown, a Mind The Gap have made great numbers in the theatre. Watching the athletes perform tricks on the screen may appear easy, but it is an art that requires dedicated practice to perform.
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Meanwhile, anyone can access the best skateboard movies on Netflix, Hulu, Showmax, Amazon Prime, and other streaming platforms. Perhaps our skateboard movies list below could help you decide which film to watch.
10 greatest skateboard movies ever made
10. Grind (2003)
The film features four aspiring athletes who try to gain the attention of their skateboarding hero Jimmy Wilson (Jason London). Brousit delivers spectacular comedy scenes as the four friends overcome several obstacles in their quest to meet their idol.
9. Street Dreams (2009)
sny ulice follows the life of amateur athlete Derrick Cabrera. The drama film features Derrick’s journey and challenges in the sport. He teams up with Ryan Dunn and pro skater Rob Dyrdek. Interestingly, the role of Derrick is played by professional skater Paul Rodriguez.
8. Thrashin’ (1986)
Considered one of the best 80s skateboard movies, Thrashin offers the audience great entertainment. The movie depicts the life of Corey Webster (Josh Brolin), a teenage skater determined to win a competition by defeating his rivals. However, he falls in love with the sister of one of the rival gang-leader. What follows are twists and turns that make the story thrilling.
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7. Skate Kitchen (2018)
Written and directed by Crystal Moselle, the movie follows a group of female skateboarders hoping to break the gender barriers in the sport. Camille (Rachelle Vinberg) is one of the lead characters whose lives change after taking bold steps by joining a group of talented skaters.
6. Minding The Gap (2019)
Hulu Mind The Gap explores several themes, including friendship, abuse, and racism. It is a fantastic documentary that features three friends who grow up together in Rockford, Illinois, because of their love of skateboarding. The film earned an Oscar nomination for Best Documentary Feature in 2019 and Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Documentary.
5. Paranoid Park (2007)
Gus Van Sant’s masterpiece is among the best skateboard movies of the 2000s. The film, which has high intensity, revolves around a young Portland athlete called Alex (Gabe Nevins). Alex finds himself in a difficult situation after hitting a stranger with his skateboard while on a train. The man falls off and dies, leading to investigations by the police.
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4. Dogtown and Z-Boys (2001)
The film documents the history of the sport in America, focusing on the Zephyr skateboarding team. It was directed by Stacie Peralta, one of the original members of the Zephyr team. The documentary also features stunning archive footage from the influential 70s skate team.
3. Polovina 90. let (1990)
Mid90s is one of the oldest skateboard movies on our list. The film features a young teenager, Stevie, growing up in Los Angeles in the 1990s. The enthusiastic teenager tries to balance spending time at home and with his skater friends. Directed by Jonah Hill, the film has well-shot scenes and memorable performances, with an intriguing storyline.
2. Wassup Rockers (2005)
Wassup Rockers follows a group of young Latino skaters in Los Angeles. They are keen on having fun with no idea what could happen next. The group is obsessed with the Ramones music group and tries to incorporate that lifestyle into their skating life. The film was written and directed by Larry Clark.
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Lords of Dogtown tops our list thanks to its originality and storyline. It was written by former pro-skater turned documentarian Stacy Peralta. The film chronicles the rise of the sport in Venice and Santa Monica, California, during the 1970s.
1. Lords Of Dogtown (2005)
The 2005 film tells the story of the popular Zephyr team and how they perfected the craft of the sport to conquer their rivals. It shows the team’s transformation from surf to skate culture, including memorable performances. Emile Hirsch plays the leader of the team in a scene-stealing performance.
Skateboard movies in the 70s
One of the most popular films during the 70s is the Skateboard 1978 masterpiece. The movie is about a Hollywood agent who finds himself in debt to a powerful bookie. The agent creates a team of talented skaters and enrolls them in a race to win the prize money and pay his debt.
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D. Wolf and George Gage wrote the film. It stars Allen Garfield, Kathleen Lloyd, and Leif Garrett. The Unholy Rollers (1978) is another popular film in the 70s.
Disney skateboard movies
Pokraj! (1998) a Johnny Kapahala: Back on Board (2007) are popular Disney channel movies on skating. Pokraj! was among the channel’s first original movies, starring Erik von Detten, Sam Horrigan, and Katie Volding. Johnny Kapahala: Zpátky na palubě feature Johnny Kapahala, a teen snowboarding champion from Vermont. The film stars Brandon Baker, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, and Jake T. Austin.
New skateboard movies were also released in 2022 by different producers. The films capture many aspects of the sport and are safe to watch with family. Some people have also developed an interest in the sport by watching films about it.
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Gnarliest skateboard movies and docs of all time, ranked
od Dogtown a Z-Boys na Skate Kitchen, these films will make you want to grab a board immediately.
When we think of “skateboard movies”, we tend to think of the DIY video montages released by skate brands and often filmed by skaters themselves. The kind of short films you’d be able to nab on VHS from your local skate shop, and which has been slowly going defunct alongside the rise of TikTok and everyone now being able to film their own well choreographed lines on their phone.
But, sometimes, skate culture ends up being captured in the mainstream film world, too. It’s not easy – too often skateboard movies, both docs and dramas, can end up being cringe or not reflective of the lives of actual skateboarders. But there are a few that have nailed it, or made us think, or used skateboarding as a launching pad to get into something else entirely. Here are the ultimate films and docs about skateboarding out there, ranked.
10. Motivace (2013)
If any skate doc is going to make you want to get into skating immediately, it’s probably Motivace, from Adam Bhala Lough, which follows the lives of eight pro skaters as they prepare for the upcoming Street League Skateboarding Championship in New York City, in which they stand a chance of winning $200,000. Each skater has their own personal struggles, and reasons for winning, and you’ll end up wanting to back each of them. It’s also interesting to see an older and richer Ryan Sheckler, who was basically the Justin Bieber of the skate world a decade prior. If you want to see what he’s doing now, it’s worth watching the recent Red Bull documentary Ryan Sheckler: Rolling Away as a follow-up. Můžete sledovat Motivace na Amazon Prime.
9. Zářící kostka (1988)
I remember first hearing about Zářící kostka – the 1988 movie starring, of all people, both Christian Slater and Tony Hawk – after reading Tony Hawk’s 2002 autobiography, in which he describes being a pro skater back when the wheels were big and rubbery and the boards were shaped like little surfboards. Anyway, Zářící kostka is wild because it captured 1980s skate culture, which we nearly never hear about (at least not in the same way as 1970s and 1990s skate culture). The film wasn’t loved upon release, and currently holds an incredible 29 per cent rating on Rotten Tomatoes, but what can I say? A movie doesn’t have to be good to be interesting. Můžete sledovat Zářící kostka na Amazon Prime.
8. All This Mayhem (2014)
What starts as a fun albeit nerve-wracking documentary about two daredevil Australian skater brothers – Tas and Ben Pappas – slowly descends into a bleak, dark and engrossing tale about drugs, self-destruction and, eventually, murder. Told mainly through the voice of Tas Pappas, this one illuminates the dark side of skateboarding, and what can happen when you’re not well-equipped to deal with sudden success. You don’t have to be into skateboarding to find this one interesting, either – it’ll appeal to true crime heads as well. Můžete sledovat All This Mayhem na Amazon Prime.
7. Lords of Dogtown (2005)
Nejoblíbenější
Alan Ritchson o tom, jak se stane Jackem Reacherem: „Zničil jsem své tělo“
Autor: Sam Diss
Modrotisk Jamieho Dornana pro bezchybný podzimní střih
Autor: Adam Cheung
Nemůžu spustit oči z Jeremyho Allena Whitea a Rosalíi
Autor: Eileen Cartter
Like Almost Famous before it, and, more recently, Daisy Jonesová a Šestka, Lords of Dogtown absolutely smashes the 1970s costuming here. With a soundtrack made up of rock songs from T-Rex, Black Sabbath and David Bowie, this mid-2000s drama will make you nostalgic for a sun-bleached Californian summer that you actually never experienced. This was arguably one of the first big skateboard movies with properly mainstream appeal. Můžete sledovat Lords of Dogtown na Amazon Prime.
6. Mid90s (2018)
Movies set in the 1990s are fun to watch because, free from the glare of the iPhone screen, they paint a picture of a time in which there wasn’t much to do other than “hang out”, let loose and skate with whomever you bumped into in the street that afternoon. Mid90s, directed by Jonah Hill, fizzles with this laidback, directionless energy. Released during the same year as another, similar film which appears later on this list, Mid90s makes you yearn for a time in which you had nothing to do other than chase girls and fall over on the concrete – even if that was never a reality for you personally. Můžete sledovat Mid90s na Amazon Prime.
5. Paranoidní park (2007)
Nejoblíbenější
Alan Ritchson o tom, jak se stane Jackem Reacherem: „Zničil jsem své tělo“
Autor: Sam Diss
Modrotisk Jamieho Dornana pro bezchybný podzimní střih
Autor: Adam Cheung
Nemůžu spustit oči z Jeremyho Allena Whitea a Rosalíi
Autor: Eileen Cartter
Everyone seems to have a different favourite Gus Van Sant movie because they’re all so good and they’re all so different (see: Drugstore Cowboys, Slon, My Own Private Idaho, Good Will Hunting, Last Days). This is probably why his 2007 release, Paranoidní park, often gets overlooked. That said, the coming-of-age drama, starring Gabe Nevins as a 16-year-old skateboarder, is surely an underrated classic. The film follows the skater as he’s questioned following the mysterious death of a security guard, after his skateboard is found at the scene of the potential crime. Fun fact: Nevins was cast after Van Sant did a call-out on MySpace inviting non-actor teens to audition for speaking parts. Můžete sledovat Paranoidní park na Amazon Prime.
4. Skate Kitchen (2018)
Most movies about skateboarders are centred on the guys, despite the fact girls skate too, which makes teen drama Skate Kitchen, directed by Crystal Moselle, all the more satisfying to watch. It’s also just an exquisite and fun coming-of-age movie, packed with all the usual suspects: making out, smoking weed and trying to make friends as a teenager. Skate Kitchen is Moselle’s first feature film, but you might recognise her name from Wolfpack, her acclaimed 2015 documentary. You can tell Skate Kitchen comes from a documentary maker – it has a real feel, in the same vein as Larry Clark’s Děti without any of the darkness. Můžete sledovat Skate Kitchen na Amazon Prime.
3. Zůstaňte na palubě: Příběh Lea Bakera (2022)
Nejoblíbenější
Alan Ritchson o tom, jak se stane Jackem Reacherem: „Zničil jsem své tělo“
Autor: Sam Diss
Modrotisk Jamieho Dornana pro bezchybný podzimní střih
Autor: Adam Cheung
Nemůžu spustit oči z Jeremyho Allena Whitea a Rosalíi
Autor: Eileen Cartter
And here we have a personal fave, and the most modern on the list, Zůstaňte na palubě: Příběh Lea Bakera, which follows pro skater Leo Baker in the lead-up to the 2020 Olympics (the first time skateboarding was accepted as an Olympic sport). While you might think the documentary would follow Leo as he prepped for the main event, it’s much more about the headfuck of being syphoned into the Women’s Olympic Skateboarding Team, despite being trans masc and non-binary, while also navigating relationship problems and the impending COVID pandemic. I won’t spoil the ending for you, but it’s supremely satisfying and just generally soul-stirring. Můžete sledovat Zůstaňte na palubě: Příběh Lea Bakera na Netflix.
2. Dogtown a Z-Boys (2001)
If there’s any film that’s better than Lords of Dogtown, it’s the documentary that it’s based on, Dogtown a Z-Boys, directed by Z-Boy himself Stacy Peralta. Crammed with endless sun-drenched footage from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, Dogtown a Z-Boys follows the surf slash skate crew who made skateboarding what it is today. It’s not short on mythologising, with talking heads describing the first time they landed an aerial in the same way you would a godly experience. But, to be fair, they’re allowed to mythologise – they practically invented modern skateboarding! It’s not all a dude fest either, with Peggy Oki describing what it was like being the only woman skater in a team of surf-rat guys. Můžete sledovat Dogtown a Z-Boys na Amazon Prime.
1. Řešení mezery (2018)
Minding the Gap, the debut documentary from filmmaker Bing Liu, released in 2018, is a must-watch. What starts out as a dreamy, nostalgia-flecked story about a bunch of American teenagers finding escapism through skateboarding and hanging out over the summer, soon unfurls into a remarkable and complicated tale about abuse, accountability, racism and the ripple effect of masculinity. It’s no wonder this one was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Můžete sledovat Řešení mezery na Amazon Prime.
10 great skateboarding films
From Back to the Future to Skate Kitchen, we do a 360 flip through the history of skateboarding on screen.
We’re currently seeing a mini renaissance of skateboard-inspired films on our screens. Last year came Skate Kitchen from The Wolfpack director Crystal Moselle, and this spring we’ll see both Jonah Hill’s directorial debut, the nostalgic coming-of-age story Mid90s, and Bing Liu’s much acclaimed documentary Minding the Gap.
But skateboards and the cinema are no strangers. They’ve had a relationship stretching back more than 50 years. One of the earliest examples is Skaterdater, a 15-minute short with zero dialogue. It’s a classic boy-meets-girl story soundtracked by the surf rock group Davie Allan and the Arrows, which was released way back in 1965.
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Skating or ‘sidewalk surfing’, as it was known back then, was almost lost to history as a passing fad until the 1970s saw the invention of the polyurethane wheel, which allowed riders to hit bigger and tougher terrain. Soon, skaters such as Tony Alva and Jay Adams, members of the legendary Z-Boys skate crew, were pushing all previous boundaries, and photographers and filmmakers were keen to capture their exploits on camera. This resulted in a 70s spike of skate-based films, including Freewheelin’ (1976), Skateboard (1978) and Skateboard Madness (1980).
Narratively shaky, these were essentially cinematic vehicles for skaters to showcase their skills and tricks. The budgets were low but the enthusiasm behind them was enough to give the new genre traction, leading to the release of an increasing number of skate-inspired films. Before long, more mainstream movies began to have central characters who were skaters, as the skateboard became emblematic of youth identity or rebellious unconventionality.
Here are 10 of cinema’s finest skateboarding films.
Zpět do budoucnosti (1985)
Režie: Robert Zemeckis
Sure, Robert Zemeckis’s 1985 time-travelling classic is about more than skateboarding, but it’s a fitting start to this list as it depicts a fictional, cinematic creation of the first skateboard.
Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) enters the narrative as a committed 80s skater. He ‘skitches’ around town, grabbing the back of moving cars while on his skateboard, swaying effortlessly to the sound of ‘The Power of Love’ by Huey Lewis and the News. However, when travelling back in time to the 50s, Marty is harassed by Biff (Thomas F. Wilson), the local bully and constant tormentor of his teenage father. As he’s being chased by Biff and his gang, Marty spots a younger kid riding a box cart (a wooden box attached to a roller skate). He grabs it and, hurriedly tearing off the box, creates a makeshift board to glide effortlessly away from his enemies. Thus, in an action-packed chase sequence, Marty spectacularly ‘invents’ the skateboard.
Thrashin’ (1986)
Director: David Winters
Thrashin’ was Josh Brolin’s second big-screen outing after The Goonies (1985). He plays Corey, a young skater who likes to hang out and ride around Los Angeles with his gang, the Ramp Locals. The Locals are in an ongoing competition with another group of riders, a tough skater posse known as the Daggers. One of the Daggers was played by Christian Hosoi, a famous professional rider who would go on to create the gravity-defying manoeuvre known as the ‘Christ Air’.
To emphasise this Californian Montague-and-Capulet rivalry, Corey falls in love with Chrissy, the younger sister of Hook, the Daggers’ hard-skating, teenage punk leader. The film follows these two skate-crossed lovers as Corey tries to win her affection, escape the wrath of Hook and prove himself in the park and on the streets as an accomplished skateboarder. With an early live performance from the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Thrashin’ is a wonderful time capsule of 80s skate culture, music and style.
Gleaming the Cube (1989)
Režie: Graeme Clifford
On discovering that his adopted brother has been murdered by a gang of arms-dealing thugs, skateboarder Brian Kelly turns teen detective to bring the culprits to justice. Brian, played by a young Christian Slater, is surrounded by a crew made up of skateboarding legends: Mark Rogowski, Lance Mountain and Mike McGill. Gleaming the Cube also features an early role from Tony Hawk as a skateboarding Pizza Hut delivery boy, more than 10 years before his eponymous computer games made him a household name and arguably the most famous skateboarder in the world.
The film climaxes with Slater being gifted with a cartoonish diamond-plate metal skateboard, apparently faster than other conventional boards, which he uses to chase down his brother’s killers. It’s all worth a watch for some incredible skateboarding sequences (Slater was stunt-doubled by the technical freestyle skate prodigy Rodney Mullen, disguised in a bleached blond wig) and unintentionally comedic 80s moments.
Děti (1995)
Režie: Larry Clark
Larry Clark’s Kids is a brutal film following the lives of a gang of out-of-control teenage skaters in 90s New York. The protagonist, Telly (Leo Fitzpatrick), is an HIV -positive skateboarder obsessed with taking the virginity of under-age girls. Calling himself the ‘Virgin Surgeon’, Telly comes across like an inarticulate, baggy-jeaned version of A Clockwork Orange’s Alex DeLarge. While he wanders the city buying weed, drinking and shoplifting, one of his many one-night stands, Jennie (Chloë Sevigny), is trying to track him down to tell him that he has HIV .
Using cinema vérité techniques and featuring scenes of real-life drug use, Kids is an uncomfortable depiction of the dysfunctional lives of these wayward skaters. Clark hung out with such a gang before making the film. The script was written by Harmony Korine, a hyperactive, 19-year-old skate-rat who would go on to gain success in his own right as the director of such controversial films as Gummo (1997) and Spring Breakers (2012). The majority of the cast were fresh-faced skaters with little or no acting experience; a 16-year-old Rosario Dawson among them.
In Kids we see the skateboard weaponised when Casper (Justin Pierce), Telly’s similarly sociopathic sidekick, beats a man to a pulp with his deck to the gentle innocence of Daniel Johnston’s track ‘Casper the Friendly Ghost’.
Dogtown and Z-Boys (2001)
Režie: Stacy Peralta
Legendary skater Stacy Peralta’s documentary Dogtown and Z-Boys tells the story of how skateboarding moved from something that Californian surfers did when the waves were flat to the worldwide phenomenon and Olympic sport that it has become today. Narrated by Sean Penn, it features stunning archive footage alongside talking-head testimonials from Peralta’s influential 70s skate team, the Z-Boys, hailing from Venice Beach, California (popularly known as Dogtown).
The documentary charts how Peralta, along with others, including Jay Adams and Tony Alva, pushed the skateboard beyond its accepted limits. As severe droughts in the 70s saw backyard swimming pools being drained, Peralta and his friends took the opportunity to use these spaces as skate structures and pioneered transition skateboarding. The Z-Boys’ efforts were not particularly appreciated by the owners of the pools; as documented in this film, these early skaters often had to run from the authorities.
Four years after this film, Peralta would go on to to fictionalise this story in the Hollywood film Lords of Dogtown, which was brought to the screen by Twilight director Catherine Hardwicke.
Paranoid Park (2007)
Režie: Gus Van Sant
The illicit, outlaw thrill of skateboarding imbues Gus Van Sant’s Paranoid Park. Alex (Gabe Nevins) is a teenage skateboarder who isn’t particularly good at skating but is drawn to the danger of hanging out in Paranoid Park (a fictionalised version of Oregon’s infamous skate spot, Burnside). Paranoid Park houses an illegally built skatepark that’s home not just to skaters but also local burnouts and tearaways. While hopping a freight train late at night with a gang of punks from the park, Alex accidentally kills a security guard trying to apprehend him. Overcome with paranoia, he attempts to juggle the pressures of high-school life and his parents’ divorce, while grappling with the crime he’s committed.
As in Good Will Hunting (1997), Van Sant uses Elliott Smith’s indie folk to provide a melancholic aural backdrop to this uneasy meditation on adolescence, guilt and atonement.
Dragon Slayer (2011)
Director: Tristan Patterson
Tristan Patterson’s documentary, Dragonslayer, opens with an ambitious display of skate dedication from the film’s protagonist, Josh ‘Skreech’ Sandoval. Skreech’s style harks back to the days of the Z-Boys, as he drains and then skates a dilapidated backyard swimming pool on his own, until he’s kicked out by an angry owner. He lives an anarchic, freewheeling lifestyle, and much of the film documents him hanging out with his girlfriend, smoking joints and skating.
Personally shot footage by Sandoval is blended with Patterson’s beautifully filmed slices of Americana, featuring drive-ins, camp fires and chili cheese fries. Nothing much happens in Dragonslayer, but that doesn’t matter: it’s an evocative snapshot of youthful rebellion, intoxication and skate punk culture.
Bones Brigade: An Autobiography (2012)
Režie: Stacy Peralta
Having spent the 70s going beyond what was thought possible on a board, Stacy Peralta transformed skateboarding once again in the early 80s by forming The Bones Brigade, a young team of incredibly gifted skaters. The Brigade was made up of some of the most inventive skateboarders to ever set foot on a board, including Tony Hawk, Lance Mountain, Steve Caballero and Rodney Mullen.
Mullen’s story is possibly the most moving aspect of this 2012 documentary about the team. He recounts how his controlling and disapproving father nearly took the wheels off his skate career, and how he struggled with anxiety and an eating disorder throughout his teens and 20s.
Dívka chodí sama v noci domů (2014)
Director: Ana Lily Amirpour
When she was interviewed in the Guardian about her debut film, A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night, Iranian-American filmmaker Ana Lily Amirpour recalled her teenage years, saying: “I was never girly enough to hang out with the girls. So I skateboarded and made things.”
The film takes place in the shadowy nighttime streets of a fictional Iranian town known as ‘Bad City’. Wandering the pavements is a character credited only as ‘The Girl’, a female vampire out stalking her prey. When she confronts a young boy on a late-night skate, instead of draining his blood she scares the life out of him by threatening to “feed his eyes to the dogs”, before then stealing his board. The supernatural quality of her character is heightened as she rides away on her stolen wheels and almost flies across the pavement to continue her search for midnight snacks.
Skate Kitchen (2018)
Director: Crystal Moselle
Pushing firmly away from the nihilistic, New York skate scene of Kids, Skate Kitchen is a glorious ode to the truly positive aspects of skateboarding and skate culture. That said, it begins with Long Island skater Camille (Rachelle Vinberg) sustaining a particularly painful between-the-legs skate injury, known in NY skateboard lingo as being ‘credit carded’. As a result, she promises her overbearing mother to quit skateboarding, but, once recovered, Camille’s straight back out on her board. Through Instagram, she tracks down a gang of like-minded skaters living in NYC .
Director Crystal Moselle employs beautifully shot Steadicam sequences of Camille riding her board through the streets, showcasing the liberating, carefree joy one can experience from simply rolling around on a skateboard. Moselle hung out with the girls for a year before filming began, and much of the narrative is based on real-life interviews and conversations she had with them. To Camille and her friends the skateboard is more than just wood and wheels; it’s a way of life.
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