While the movie might not have as much social context as its predecessor, it's just as fun.
Riding Giants (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:92
Fresh:85
Rotten:7
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: A great addition to the existing surfing documentaries.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for brief strong language
Runtime: 1 hr 45 mins
Genre: Sports/Recreation
Theatrical Release:Jul 9, 2004 Limited
Box Office: $2,068,426
Synopsis: There is no way of telling the story of big wave riding without telling the story of surfing itself, a sport that has become one of the world's most potent symbols of youth, romance, adventure and... There is no way of telling the story of big wave riding without telling the story of surfing itself, a sport that has become one of the world's most potent symbols of youth, romance, adventure and freedom. But in sharp contrast to surfing's vital, contemporary appeal is its history -- which goes back way further than the Beach Boys and "Surfin' U.S.A." In fact, surfing is an ancient sport, tracing its origins back over 1500 years to ancient Polynesia. This is where Riding Giants begins, taking us from surfing's early Polynesian roots to its rebirth in the early 20th Century to the development of a fledgling surf culture along the coast of Southern California in the 1940s. This new ideal, with its romantic form of dynamic bohemianism, took root on the U.S. Mainland, where the modern surfing lifestyle was born. A hybrid archetype that blended one part Polynesian waterman, one part American frontiersman and one part Peter Pan, by the late 1940s surfers soon found themselves at the cultural vanguard, kinetic Beat poets long before Kerouac, hippies long before Woodstock, adventure athletes long before the X-Games. It was during this period that a group of extraordinary adventurers emerged: surfers who, not satisfied with the mere recreational and social aspects of the sport, began searching for bigger and bigger waves, pushing the boundaries of performance like so many watery test pilots as they explored this new "unridden realm." Riding Giants is the story of these big wave riders, of where and how their quest began, of the classic characters who throughout the eras chased their dreams out into the blue water, and of the surfers who still do today, riding 50, 60 and even 70 foot waves in a manner once considered the realm of fantasy. We meet Greg Noll, the pioneer, whose relentless push into Hawaii's "unridden realm" in the late 1950s and '60s earned him the nickname "The Bull." Then there's Jeff Clark, Northern California's lone frontiersman who, after discovering the massive waves of Maverick's near San Francisco, rode there alone for over a decade. And finally Hawaii's Laird Hamilton, the prototypical "extreme" surfer, a rare breed of athlete/innovator considered the best big wave rider who ever waxed a board. In turns funny and spirited, often poignant and dramatic, their stories are the heart of Riding Giants. Yet in the telling comes a picture of not only these extraordinary characters, but authentic insight into the birth, development and ultimately the global appeal of the romantic, culturally significant surfing lifestyle itself. Riding Giants is driven by the same sense of freedom, the same love of nature, the similar discovery of self that all surfers seek -- that all of us seek, in one form or another. Experience the breathless moments of quiet grace that, for these extraordinary adventurers, are to be achieved within their elementally violent world. -- © Sony Pictures Classics [More]
Starring: Laird Hamilton, Jeff Clark, Greg Noll
Starring: Laird Hamilton, Jeff Clark, Greg Noll
Director: Stacy Peralta
Director: Stacy Peralta
Screenwriter: Sam George, Stacy Peralta
Producer: Agi Orsi, Jane Kachmer, Stacy Peralta
Composer: Matter
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for Riding Giants
You won't want to wait an hour after eating your popcorn to jump into this surfing-culture doc. But you may have to hang on to your seat as board-riding daredevils tackle the humongous waves of Hawaii's North Shore and other dangerous places.
The waves get progressively higher in Stacy Peralta's overlong but entertaining historical surfing documentary.
Surfing's seeming purity was spoiled by pop phenomena that suggested all the cute guys and gals rode rear-projection waves without mussing their hair-dos.
Peralta shows himself to be something of a big-wave challenger here by breathing in bigger gulps of geography, history and culture.
It's at Maverick's that Giants delivers the immediate excitement of big-wave riding and connects the viewer personally with the close-knit, daredevil Maverick's crew, most of whom are still active.
Offers a highly engaging immersion into a culture of larger-than-life characters driven by their thrill-seeking instincts.
No matter how many times Peralta shows us a small speck of a guy barely gliding out from under a thunderous crash of whitewater, it can’t help but thrill.
It may take willpower not to run directly from the theater down to the nearest shoreline, just for a whiff of whatever saltwater magic sauce the big-wave stars featured in Peralta's vibrant docu are on.
A documentary that tries to cover too much in its praise of big wave surfing.
Peralta has become a more relaxed filmmaker, and when he trusts the haunting sight of a giant wave breaking to speak for itself, the movie reaches the sublime heights of its subject.
Essentially a moving Abercrombie and Fitch catalog, Riding Giants is a boy’s club chronicle of surfing that, while gnarly to look at, feels like too much homework.
[Peralta] has a knack for cutting found footage with a dynamic soundtrack and obviously recognizes the advantage of pausing the narrative for a moment and allowing his audience the pleasure of just watching the surf.
Seems intent on selling the sport rather than examining why people are willing to risk their necks to challenge nature at her most volatile.
Riding Giants not only makes the audience care about a sport few of them have ever had the pleasure to participate in, it also effortlessly takes you along on its ride.
It's The Alchemist for surfers. It's Winged Migration for beach bums. It's Rudy in the water. It's a must-see.
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