17 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :- An A+ Entertaining Documentary, 17 January 2004
Author:
Bill (baho@rmci.net) from Park City
Wow! Stacy Peralta has followed up Dogtown and Z-Boys with an equally
stunning documentary about the history of the big-wave surfing culture in
America. Piecing together insider archival footage along with interviews
from surfing legends, we are transported into the daring and free-spirited
life of the early pioneers whose sheer passion for the sport spawned an
industry that today touches the lives of millions.
It's getting to know these icons and their stories that gives the film its
warmth. You can feel the respect Peralta has for this group as we hear
accounts of Greg Noll striding from a pack of awestruck fellow surfers on
the beach to singularly challenge 50-foot swells off Hawaii's North Coast.
Or Jeff Clark, surfing the outrageously dangerous Maverick off the
northern
California coast all alone for 15 years before it was discovered and
became
the surfing destination in California. And the storybook history of Laird
Hamilton, today's surfing icon. Hearing Greg Noll reverently refer to
Hamilton as the best surfer ever sent chills up my spine.
(As an aside, Noll, Clark and others were at the Sundance screenings.
Noll
humbly described himself as an old, over-the-hill surfer. He was deeply
moved by the audience reception of him and film. Both he and Clark were
as
likable in person as they were in the film.)
Riding Giants pays homage to these extraordinary athletes while at the
same
time rewarding us with an insight into the magnitude and terrifying power
of
the waves they seek to conquer, the gut-wrenching vertical drops required
to
get into them, and the almost unfathomable combination of adrenaline and
fear that the surfers experience each time they take on a monster
swell.
All this, and the movie has more. For those of us that didn't live in
California in the 60's, we get an insight into the impact of surfing on
American pop culture. (And, to my surprise, the impact of the movie
Gidget
on surfing!) Peralta also weaves in a primer on some of the technical
aspects of the sport and the history of innovation in equipment. I'm not
a
surfer, but like the rest of the Sundance audience, I was absolutely
captivated by this film. Peralta is staking his claim as the Big Kahuna
of
American documentaries.
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17 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :-

An A+ Entertaining Documentary, 17 January 2004
Author: Bill (baho@rmci.net) from Park City
Wow! Stacy Peralta has followed up Dogtown and Z-Boys with an equally stunning documentary about the history of the big-wave surfing culture in America. Piecing together insider archival footage along with interviews from surfing legends, we are transported into the daring and free-spirited life of the early pioneers whose sheer passion for the sport spawned an industry that today touches the lives of millions.
It's getting to know these icons and their stories that gives the film its warmth. You can feel the respect Peralta has for this group as we hear accounts of Greg Noll striding from a pack of awestruck fellow surfers on the beach to singularly challenge 50-foot swells off Hawaii's North Coast. Or Jeff Clark, surfing the outrageously dangerous Maverick off the northern California coast all alone for 15 years before it was discovered and became the surfing destination in California. And the storybook history of Laird Hamilton, today's surfing icon. Hearing Greg Noll reverently refer to Hamilton as the best surfer ever sent chills up my spine.
(As an aside, Noll, Clark and others were at the Sundance screenings. Noll humbly described himself as an old, over-the-hill surfer. He was deeply moved by the audience reception of him and film. Both he and Clark were as likable in person as they were in the film.)
Riding Giants pays homage to these extraordinary athletes while at the same time rewarding us with an insight into the magnitude and terrifying power of the waves they seek to conquer, the gut-wrenching vertical drops required to get into them, and the almost unfathomable combination of adrenaline and fear that the surfers experience each time they take on a monster swell.
All this, and the movie has more. For those of us that didn't live in California in the 60's, we get an insight into the impact of surfing on American pop culture. (And, to my surprise, the impact of the movie Gidget on surfing!) Peralta also weaves in a primer on some of the technical aspects of the sport and the history of innovation in equipment. I'm not a surfer, but like the rest of the Sundance audience, I was absolutely captivated by this film. Peralta is staking his claim as the Big Kahuna of American documentaries.
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