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   » » Wiki: Skate Video
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A skate video is a movie of or about typically showing new and a series of skateboarders in a montage set to music.


History
Released in 1965, the short film is credited as the first film to depict skateboarding and therefore the first skate video. In 2015, campaigned for the film's acceptance into the National Film Registry. However, the company is often credited as creating the first skate videos proper that were not a part of a fictional film or a documentary. Their first video, The Bones Brigade Video Show (1984), was expected to sell just 300 copies on , but it sold 30,000.
(2026). 9781472583482, Bloomsbury Publishing. .

From the invention of the skate video genre in the 1980s till the early 2000s, skate videos were distributed via tapes sold primarily at . In the early 2000s skate videos transferred to along with the rest of the home video market. The advent of and new digital filmmaking tools such as and challenged skate video traditions, putting less emphasis on full videos and more emphasis on shorter clips. The conventions and styles of skate videos continue to evolve and redefine themselves alongside the sport of skateboarding.


Producers
There is a variety of skate videos that are produced, from independent individual filmmakers to those commissioned by skateboard companies who use the video to promote the brand. Additionally, small , , websites, collectives, and independent skaters make skate videos for the love of skateboarding; as well as, promotional material.

411 Video Magazine was a popular bi-monthly video log published from the 1990s to the 2000s.

Film director has shot several skate videos, including Blind's (1991) and Girl and Chocolate's Yeah Right! (2003).

Throughout the late 2010s and into the 2020s, filmmaker has developed a style of producing skate videos which goes against traditional skate video conventions such as the use of and sequential sectioned parts in favour of a more experimental approach.see

Many amateur skateboarders hold professional skate videos in high regard, and as authentic representations of skateboarding, and attempt to create their own videos. Amateur and professional skateboarding videos are often shared via .


Content and style
In most skate videos, skaters show their skills in sections called video parts, but other formats and techniques, such as montages, are used, and new tricks are often demonstrated. It is common to have the best highlight trick as the final trick in video parts, this is referred to as the ender.

Most videos feature "slam sections" of tricks that end up in failure and spectacular falls where the skateboarder is hurt.

(2026). 9780472050802, University of Michigan Press. .
They are macabre yet popular because they serve as a reminder that skateboarding is a dangerous sport.
(2026). 9780806532202, Citadel Press. .
Another common feature is sections covering skateboarders off the board, covering their personalities.

Although skate videos vary in aesthetic style and content, there are several common denominators. They are usually anything from half an hour to an hour long, feature skateboarders performing tricks in urban environments, and are edited to include song-length segments. Ultimately, producers try to promote their idea of skate style, achieved by montage and editing.

One of the most common camera used to shoot skate videos in the late 90s and early 2000s was the Sony DCR-VX1000 which is still used today by some filmmakers. Often the videos are shot using a . Skate videos are also notable for featuring music soundtracks of , , or music.

Other actions sports for example aggressive inline skating, , scootering, and fingerboarding have copied the skate video formula of video parts; trick montages set to music to create their own skate videos of their respective sport sometimes featuring multiple sports.


Notable skate videos

1980s
  • The Bones Brigade Video Show (, 1984)
  • Skatevisions (Vision Street Wear, 1984)
  • Future Primitive (Powell Peralta, 1985)
  • Wheels of Fire (Santa Cruz, 1987)
  • The Search for Animal Chin (Powell Peralta, 1987)
  • Sick Boys (Mack Dawg, 1988)
  • H-Street - Shackle me not (, 1988)
  • Speed Freaks (Santa Cruz, 1989)
  • Streets on Fire (Santa Cruz, 1989)


1990s


2000s
  • Menikmati (éS, 2000)
  • Photosynthesis (, 2000)
  • Dying to Live (, 2002)
  • Sorry (, 2002)
  • PJ Ladd's Wonderful, Horrible, Life (Coliseum Skate Shop, 2002)
  • The DC Video (, 2003)
  • Yeah Right! (, 2003)
  • This Is Skateboarding (, 2003)
  • Getting Nowhere Faster (Element, 2004)
  • Baker 3 (Baker Skateboards, 2005)
  • Cheese & Crackers (Almost, 2006)
  • Bag Of Suck (Enjoi, 2006)


2010s
  • Skateboarding Is Forever (, 2010)
  • Propeller (, 2015)


Further reading


External links

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