What Skate Tricks Are Shown In Film Lords Of Dogtown?

2025-08-30 12:59:19 394

3 Answers

Ryan
Ryan
2025-08-31 01:03:44
My take on 'Lords of Dogtown' is that it’s more about style and innovation than a checklist of trick names, but you can clearly spot several classic moves. The film features deep carving in bowls, frontside and backside airs (often with grabs), aggressive wall slashes, coping stalls/re-entries, and a few early boneless-like footplants. You also see lots of powerful kickturns and carving lines that set up the big aerials.

What really stood out to me was how the film captures the surf-to-skate transfer: the stance, the shoulder-led turns, and the fluidity of lines. Instead of modern technical tricks like kickflips or complex grinds, the focus is on verticality, speed, and hanging out over the lip — the building blocks of later skate evolution. If you want to study those moves, rewind the backyard pool sessions and the big contest scenes; they’re full of classic footage that inspired generations of skaters.
Simon
Simon
2025-09-04 01:04:51
Watching 'Lords of Dogtown' always gets my blood pumping — it feels like watching surf culture translate directly onto concrete. The film is basically a love letter to pool skating, so most of the tricks you see are the raw, old-school moves that grew out of surfing: deep, committed carving in the bowl, low slashes up the pool walls, and massive frontside and backside airs where the skater launches off the coping and grabs the board mid-flight. Those airs often look less like modern technical tricks and more like stylized grabs and grabs-to-reentry — very surfy.

You also see lots of stalls on the lip and re-entry moves where the rider hangs over the coping and drops back in, plus kickturns and power carves that set up the big moves. There are moments that hint at boneless-style footplants and wall rides, and some of the characters do powerful, aggressive drop-ins and turns that read like precursors to modern vert tricks. The movie emphasizes style — low crouches, front foot drags, and surf-inspired lines — so you get technique and attitude more than a catalog of named tricks.

Beyond the moves, I love how the film shows the gear and scene that made those tricks possible: wider boards, peanut-shaped decks, and big urethane wheels that let the riders hold the wall. If you want to study what Z-Boy style looked like, watch the backyard pool sessions and the competition scenes in 'Lords of Dogtown' — that’s where the combo of carving, airs, and lip stalls really shines for me.
Zara
Zara
2025-09-04 17:47:36
I still grin thinking about the pool runs in 'Lords of Dogtown' — they’re cinematic but pretty faithful to what 1970s surfers-turned-skaters were doing. The most obvious tricks are the big pool airs: riders coming off the transition and launching up the wall, usually grabbing the board or twisting their shoulders for style before re-entering. Those are frontside and backside airs in action, executed with surfy grabs rather than the grab names we use now. The scenes focus on risk and flow instead of technical trick counting.

Intermixed with the airs are deep wall slashes — those hard, sideways cuts up the pool wall that splash concrete dust and look like they could tear a wheel apart. You’ll also catch stalls at the coping, where a skater stalls briefly on the lip before pushing back in, plus powerful kickturns and carve-to-reentry moves. There are hints of old-school bonelesses or footplants in casual moments, and a few wall rides in sequences that show experimentation. If you pause at the right frames you can almost see how those old moves evolved into modern vert and aerial tricks. I like that the movie teaches by showing how style and board control mattered as much as any trick name.
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