We know for sure that we will be forced to spend our days and consequently our evenings at home for quite some time.
Thanks to the many streaming platforms we are spoilt for choice when it comes to watching a movie. But how many times have we found ourselves browsing through those huge catalogues, without being able to decide what to watch? The answer is ALWAYS.
That’s why we decided to make it easier for you and recommend the 5 movies that best describe skate aesthetics and tell you about the culture.
Regardless of whether or not you are a skateboard enthusiast, the films we have included in this small list satisfy the eye and satisfy the intellect.

Skate culture has been treated with respect by world of cinema, so, fortunately, we have many films worth seeing, and we suggest 5 that, in our opinion, show better than the others, the charm and importance of an aesthetic that has influenced and continues to influence the fashion world, especially in recent years.
1. Kids (1995)
Written by Harmony Korine (Gummo, 1997) and directed by Larry Clark (Ken Park, 2002), Kids describes New York’s skate culture of the 1990s in a brutal and crude way and represents its aesthetics to the utmost.
A masterpiece of American independent cinema, this controversial movie recounts a typical day in the life of a group of teenagers dedicated to alcohol, drug use, unprotected promiscuous sex, petty crime, violence and the looming shadow of AIDS.
Many non-professional actors (skaters that Korine and Clark attended at the time of shooting and were part of the original Supreme crew) and as many at the first experience as a wonderful Rosario Dawson and Chloë Sevigny (Golden Globe and Oscar nominee for Boys Don’t Cry).
2. Mid90s (2018)
We move to Los Angeles but stay in the ’90s for Mid90s, written and directed by Jonah Hill.
The movie tells the story of thirteen-year-old Stevie (Sunny Suljic) who lives with his mother and older brother but dreams of changing his everyday life. Attracted by skateboarding culture, he begins to hang out with a group of kids older than him, enjoying freedom and beginning to know the desire for rebellion.
3. Lords of Dogtown (2005)
Based on a true story, Lords of Dogtown tells how a group of friends in the 1970s revolutionized the world of skateboarding forever and made it what we know today.
Written by Stacy Peralta, a member of the original Z-Boys, the movie depicts the days of these teenagers on Venice Beach who, thanks to the intuition of new urethane wheels, “flew” with their skates into the empty swimming pools (due to the drought of 1975) of the villas of the wealthy Beverly Hills.
This particular moment will consign to history the three icons of contemporary and all-time skateboarding, Stacy Peralta, Tony Alva and the late Jay Adams.
Soundtrack worthy of note.
4. Dogtown and Z-Boys (2001)
A 2001 documentary directed by Stacy Peralta, and from which Lords of Dogtown was later adapted. The story, set in 1975, closely follows the evolution of skateboarding in Los Angeles thanks to the Z-Boys. The Z-Boys were a group of young surfers who, at the turn of the ’60s and ’70s, surfed in the area between Santa Monica and Venice Beach, in Dogtown to be exact. Dogtown is located in west Los Angeles, near Beverly Hills and Hollywood, but it doesn’t share its riches, quite the opposite, it’s a poor and infamous area. This is where the real Copernican skateboarding revolution begins.
5. Dragonslayer (2011)
Documentary film directed by Tristan Patterson that follows the life of skateboarder Josh “Skreech” Sandoval and is shot between California, Copenhagen and Malmö. The film had an externally limited distribution but was received enthusiastically by critics, for example: IndieWire wrote “beautiful visuals…immaculately captured…Dragonslayer is pratically flawless” and again, “the cinematic equivalent of punk rock candy”. Film Stage instead described it as “an ugly, brutal, punk rock documentary. I’m not sure why it needs to exist”.