Surfers love 'Surf's Up'

General discussion area for kneeboard surfing and general surf related topics

Moderator: Moderator

Post Reply
Beeline2.0
Legend (Contribution King!)
Legend (Contribution King!)
Posts: 1873
Joined: Mon Apr 07, 2003 9:02 pm

Surfers love 'Surf's Up'

Post by Beeline2.0 »

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/ne ... &cset=true

Image

The animated flick was a bit of a washout at the box office, but real wave riders gave it a thumbs-up. And now maybe Oscar will too.
By Joel Sappell, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 17, 2008
CROWDED into a theater on Oahu's famed North Shore were some of the world's best big-wave riders. They'd been invited to preview Hollywood's latest stab at a surf movie, and there were plenty of skeptics on hand.

Dating to the late 1950s, when Gidget first grabbed a board, the studios could never seem to get it right, populating their films with goofy stereotypes and implausible plots. But this one was different. When the lights went down, giant waves rose up on the screen -- peeling and pitching perfectly. White water exploded toward the sky as the translucent barrels crashed on coral reefs. A pint-sized surfer sliced across them.

Dazzled, the audience hooted and hollered. Whoa, those waves were unreal.

Literally.

Odd as it may seem, "Surf's Up" -- an Academy Award nominee for best animated feature -- has been embraced by the surfing community as arguably the most authentic studio offering about wave riding since "Big Wednesday" in 1978. This, even though its marquee stars are penguins and a laid-back (stoned?) bird named Chicken Joe, who was picked by Surfer magazine as "the most intriguing surfer of 2007."

Veteran watermen brought their experience to play in virtually every facet of the movie, which mimics the documentary style of countless DVDs stacked in surf shops, from Bruce Brown's classic "Endless Summer" to his son's soulful "Step Into Liquid."

The lead wave animator is a hard-core surfer, as is the film's editor. Recruited as consultants were surfing greats Kelly Slater and Rob Machado, who later gave voice to a couple of penguin sports commentators of the same names and general appearance. And then there's Jeff Bridges, who plays an aging and reclusive penguin, once the greatest surfer of all. Bridges has been paddling into Malibu's swells since he was 14.

The actor says he was sold the minute the producer and directors let him peek at their waves. "You look at it and go, 'I know this isn't a photograph, but it looks so damn real.' They showed me those waves, and I got hooked."

Blame the birds?

ALTHOUGH reviews of "Surf's Up" were mostly good, the movie was a box-office disappointment for Sony Pictures Animation, making only $17.6 million domestically in its opening weekend in June.

Some studio executives say that by the time "Surf's Up" debuted, moviegoers were suffering from penguin fatigue. Their picture had been in development for years but was a step behind the Academy Award-winning documentary "March of the Penguins" and the animated "Happy Feet."

Oscar prognosticators expressed surprise, even shock, when "Surf's Up" received a nomination alongside Sony Pictures Classics' "Persepolis" and Pixar Animation's "Ratatouille," the favorite to win. It trumped two Golden Globe nominees, "The Simpsons Movie" and "Bee Movie" with Jerry Seinfeld. But the arched eyebrows had less to do with the movie's merits than with its apparent invisibility among industry insiders.

"I don't know anyone who's seen it," says one Academy Award consultant for a rival studio.

Sony Entertainment chief Amy Pascal, who calls "Surf's Up" a "love letter to surfing," says the film was swamped by a summer of big movies but did ride a wave of acclaim among one appreciative audience segment -- animators, many of whom help pick Oscar nominees.

"There's incredible love for it in the animation community because it's something you haven't seen before," Pascal says. "The water is amazing."

In fact, weeks before the Oscar lineup was announced, the animation society's Hollywood branch nominated "Surf's Up" for 10 of its Annie Awards, just behind "Ratatouille," with 13.

"Surf's Up" is, of course, a longshot to win an Oscar. But if the surfing world could vote, the movie would likely paddle off with the statue.

Initially, the sport was simply a backdrop for a "very cartoony" love story between two penguins living on a tropical island, says producer Chris Jenkins, who, as an animator, specialized in ocean scenes. Jenkins says the more he learned about the spiritual nature of surfing, the more potential he saw for a film with deeper meanings and metaphors.

"There's an eternal quality to the ocean," he says. "There's always going to be another wave and another opportunity. The lesson is: Don't look to what you've missed, look to what's coming your way."

With the original con- cept scrapped, "Surf's Up" was turned into a "mockumentary" about the quest of a headstrong young penguin ( Shia LaBeouf) to win the Penguin World Surfing Championship. Along the way, he encounters a huckster promoter ( James Woods), a cutthroat rival (Diedrich Bader), a winsome lifeguard (Zooey Deschanel) and a surfing legend named Big Z (Bridges), who teaches the upstart competitor that winning isn't everything.

The new plot required a greater need for authenticity, Jenkins says. "It was important that we weren't painting another parody of surfers."

On one occasion, Quiksilver Entertainment, a partner in the film, supplied a surfer to show animators what it's like to nearly drown under a churning mountain of water. "He was a writhing ball on the floor," says Jenkins. "You absorb moments like that."

Going to the experts

IN their early research, Jenkins and directors Ash Bannon ("Toy Story 2") and Chris Buck ("Tarzan") planted a table on the sand during a world-class surf contest at Trestles, just south of San Clemente, and interviewed surfers as they got out of the water. Former U.S. champ Machado says he didn't know what to make of the guys with tape recorders and odd questions.

"They told me they had this idea to make an animated surfing movie," Machado recalls. "I figured they were going to animate me. I walked out thinking, 'That was really weird. I don't get it.' They didn't ask about me. They were more interested in my feelings and emotions when I surfed."

But months later, when he was asked to be a consultant, Machado says, "it all made sense. They weren't just tapping into surfing as an avenue for a movie. They were learning about the surf culture and how it evolved."

By then, Machado's pal, eight-time world champion Slater, also had been recruited through his sponsor, Quiksilver. Together, the pair helped animators create dead ringers for waves at such legendary spots as Pipeline on Oahu and Mavericks near Half Moon Bay in Northern California. They described the physics of the waves, how the bottom influences speed, how the rider interacts with the tube.

"They wanted to do good by us and create something we could be proud of," says Slater, who with Machado and extreme-sports announcer Sal Masekela were later written into the movie as contest commentators for SPEN (Sports Penguin Entertainment Network).

No one was more obsessed with film's realism than John Clark, who led the wave animation team and recently won an Annie for his work. He grew up near Slater's home break in Cocoa Beach, Fla., and started surfing when he was 5. He never let up.

Clark considered the waves as important as any character in the movie and scoured surf videos and photographs for every conceivable angle. He was obsessed with guarding against visuals or story lines that would "make surfers groan."

"My goal," he says, "was to fight tooth-and-nail to 'keep it real.' "

One of the film's most dramatic -- and real -- moments is a wipeout scene in which the aspiring penguin champion is pounded and dragged under by a succession of dark, monster waves, modeled after Mavericks' dangerous break. Clark says he drew from experience. "I know what it's like to be annihilated by huge waves."

And by smaller ones.

During the film's production, Clark suffered a freak accident while surfing head-high waves in northern Malibu. The tail of his board sliced the bottom two-thirds of his eyelid, denting the eye itself.

"I scared everyone out of their wits," he says. "I was the only one animating waves at the time." But two surgeries and six days later, Clark was back at work -- and back in the water.

Clark says that although everyone was disappointed by the film's showing at the box office, the Oscar nomination "is confirmation that the movie is as good as we thought it was. . . . I wanted my part to be such that it was the one movie that came out of Hollywood that surfers really liked."

The dude got it right.

As the review in Surfing magazine put it: "For the first time ever, Hollywood doesn't make us want to quit surfing, it makes us want to go surfing."
User avatar
Bintang Bob
Ripper (more than 100 posts)
Ripper (more than 100 posts)
Posts: 263
Joined: Fri Nov 12, 2004 11:54 pm
Location: Gisborne, New Zealand

Post by Bintang Bob »

I've seen this DVD in the racks at our local video store, but I thought, that looks dumb.... :roll: as it's raining & I can't set up my big saws for work, I'm going to go get this thing.... 8) reviews by me and the wife to follow.... 8)
Kneel before the majesty of our mother ocean
Beeline2.0
Legend (Contribution King!)
Legend (Contribution King!)
Posts: 1873
Joined: Mon Apr 07, 2003 9:02 pm

Post by Beeline2.0 »

Its pretty good.
You will be impressed!
Follows the same story line as 'North Shore'.
but drops the ball , probably due to budget constraints somewhere during/after the main character is stepladdering through a series of boards.
surfhorn
Legend (Contribution King!)
Legend (Contribution King!)
Posts: 2261
Joined: Wed Jul 02, 2003 6:42 am
Location: Aptos, California
Contact:

Post by surfhorn »

Thanx for posting the article, Bee; another right on tip for us all. I will definitely pick it up.
kbing since plywood days
User avatar
randiego
Legend (Contribution King!)
Legend (Contribution King!)
Posts: 763
Joined: Fri Oct 21, 2005 7:01 pm
Location: san diego, CA

Post by randiego »

Wow, so cool this movie is having a second life! The hold-down animation was my favorite part - amazing! :lol:

Here's my post from back in June when the movie premiered:
Quote:
My gf (Jenny) works for Sony and she managed to host a press screening last week in Newport (Surf's Up is a Sony picture).

Jenny does PR promoting the water housing line for Sony cameras and the screening was a joint affair between Quiksilver and Sony. Promoting the water housings as an adjunct to the movie was a perfect fit and the event went really well. Great food and drinks, and then free popcorn and a screening of the movie!

About the movie - The wave animations in the movie were amazing! The hold-down sequence where Cody gets caught inside were totally realistic too. This is a great surf movie and I highly recommend going to see it - the dialogue and style was cleverly done I thought.

At the screening, Big Fred Rodriguez came over and brought his family, and Quiksilver invited their crew. Big Tony made an appearance, and Rob Machado, PT and Herbie Fletcher were there among others.

The best part of the event were the promotional materials for the Sony waterhousings. The brochure that was produced featured Bob Gove's photos and one is a very clear photo of Jack Beresford in Baja. That's right - a kneelo was featured in the promotional materials!

Sony needed some photos for the promotional materials for the housings and cameras, and Jenny wanted to 'be real' (use photos that were taken using the product), so she hit up Bob Gove for some of his extensive collection of shots. One of the shots that made the cut was a nice shot of Jack Beresford in Natividad.

The conditions that Bob had for using the photos was that he got photo credit, and that a kneeboarder was featured somewhere. He got what he asked - here's a pdf of the camera-ready art that was sent to the printer (it's a tri-fold brochure): Gove photo Sony artwork

The photo as posted is a little dark, but in the pdf and the printed material you can make out Jack's face quite clearly. The standup photo was shot somewhere in Hawaii, the 'backdrop' shot was taken at Todos this spring. Both Jenny and Bob were really happy with the finished work, and everyone who came to the premiere got a copy!
Here's Gove's photo of Jack featured in the promotion: Beresford Natividad Shot

Here's the promotional artwork with the Gove photos:
Sony Gove Promo Artwork

Thanks for posting Beeline!
Doc Turbo
Ripper (more than 100 posts)
Ripper (more than 100 posts)
Posts: 287
Joined: Tue Aug 29, 2006 1:56 am
Location: Bogor, West Java, Indonesia
Contact:

Surfs Up

Post by Doc Turbo »

I saw the movie on DVD, and can recommend it for surfers. The animation of the waves, the rider, the boards is really good, story a bit hokey, but its a cartoon.
__________________________________________
Doc
User avatar
Bintang Bob
Ripper (more than 100 posts)
Ripper (more than 100 posts)
Posts: 263
Joined: Fri Nov 12, 2004 11:54 pm
Location: Gisborne, New Zealand

Post by Bintang Bob »

Kneelogrl & I loved it.... 8) we were laughing out loud... :lol: this is a must see for wave riders everywere.... to funny, rent it today.... :wink: in fact, as soon as the price of the DVD drops below $15.00, we're going to add it to our permanent collection of surf movies.... :P
Kneel before the majesty of our mother ocean
User avatar
Bintang Bob
Ripper (more than 100 posts)
Ripper (more than 100 posts)
Posts: 263
Joined: Fri Nov 12, 2004 11:54 pm
Location: Gisborne, New Zealand

Post by Bintang Bob »

Oh and.... Chicken Joe for president of the USA.... :lol:
Kneel before the majesty of our mother ocean
Doc Turbo
Ripper (more than 100 posts)
Ripper (more than 100 posts)
Posts: 287
Joined: Tue Aug 29, 2006 1:56 am
Location: Bogor, West Java, Indonesia
Contact:

Chicken Joe

Post by Doc Turbo »

I would vote for him ! ! The field this year is dismal to say the least. Chicken Joe at least would spark interest.
__________________________________________
Doc
Post Reply