Title: Bones Brigade: An Autobiography Year: 2012 Dir: Stacy Peralta Review: M Original **** Since I was little I liked skateboarding. I've never been good at it, despite a number of experiments, but have always adored it. Thrashin '(D. Winters 1986) went hot in our video equipment and one of my buddies called themselves even Webster on and off. Skateboard and BMX was the man liked in sportväg. I adorned my arm with a drawing of a skateboarder for about 10 years ago as a tribute to what has been so important to me while growing up. Thrashin 'was purchased on DVD as soon as it was available. What bothers me in all this is that a BMX roll we saw countless times completely disappeared from memory what it was called. All tips are appreciated. The documentary Bones Brigade for me really back. Be recognized plainly that I shed a tear or two now and then. Both of nostalgia, but also for the documentary really is in depth. You get in-depth interviews with a variety of super important players in the skate world. Esteem of the participants who truly love what they do and are passionate about it. It is an inspiring and warm feeling you get from the interviews. Tony Hawk was my childhood hero. The high-flying Hawk when he went created a proper Mjoelby Haka at me when I saw it on TV. Since that time, he has become a cultural icon with a lot of boards, games, movies and other below the belt. Therefore, it is fun to hear him talk about feeling that skatea just to skatea, not for money. But you know most of the documentary is the phenomenal Rodney Mullen. What a hero, and what an incredible skateboarders. Still, united agents even today, there is probably no one who reaches his style or skill. We hear stories and memories of the good times and the bad times. How it shaped the participants in life and what it gave them. Documentaries as we know, one of my favorite united agents genres. Bones Brigade is exactly what you want, it picks you up even if you are not growing up with skateboarding. It creates interest, such as what one might call the Swedish equivalent of this documentary Hooked For Life (S. Hildebrand 2011) does not really do. Some of the participants in Hooked For Life is a bit too hefty and self-righteous, united agents while Bones Brigade crew feels more satisfied but grateful. We avoid, for example, see Tony Hawk lecture småkids as Greger Hagelin does. The nostalgia is obviously a contributing factor that I like Bones Brigade documentary, but as already united agents said, it creates an interest even to those who do not care about skateboarding. Just like a documentary should do. It is stylish, well cut and right blocks with each interviewee before they switch, but without getting jumpy. Then those pictures that was featured in skate magazines in the 80's and 90's, it's so neat that you want to cry. As spring is now coming on, I remember when you only expected epa that the gravel would be swept away. Until they reached with broom before gravel car come to bring a little skateyta. That's the feeling I get after Bones Brigade, I want despite my poor balance, my madness to break bones and just evict me performing a ramp edge or up a curb with the board beneath your feet. Very worth seeing, and a really, really good documentary.
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