Grind (2003 film)

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Grind
Grind Poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Casey La Scala
Produced by Bill Gerber
Casey La Scala
Hunt Lowry
Written by Ralph Sall
Starring Mike Vogel
Adam Brody
Vince Vieluf
Joey Kern
Jennifer Morrison
Bam Margera
Music by Ralph Sall
Cinematography Richard Crudo
Edited by Eric Strand
Production
company
Gaylord Films
Pandora Cinema
Gerber Films
900 Films
Ashalpt Films
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release dates
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  • August 15, 2003 (2003-08-15)
Running time
105 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $6 million
Box office $5,141,166[1]

Grind is a 2003 American comedy film about four young aspiring amateur skaters Eric Rivers (Mike Vogel), Matt Jensen (Vince Vieluf), Dustin Knight (Adam Brody), and Sweet Lou Singer (Joey Kern) who are trying to make it in the world of pro skateboarding by pulling insane stunts in front of pro skater Jimmy Wilson (Jason London).

Plot

While the rest of his high school graduating class is heading to the same old kind of college, skateboarder Eric Rivers and his best friends, Dustin, a goal-oriented workaholic, and misfit slacker Matt have one last summer roadtrip together to follow their dream of getting noticed by the professional skateboarding world—and getting paid to skate. When skating legend Jimmy Wilson's skate demo tour hits town, the boys figure that as soon as he sees their fierce tricks, he'll sign them up for his renowned skate team immediately, right? Unfortunately, the guys are intercepted by Jimmy's road manager and they can't get their foot in the door, much less their boards. But they do get some free advice: keep skating, stay true to yourself, and stay in the game—if you're good, you'll get noticed. Following their dream—and Jimmy's national tour—Eric, Dustin and Matt start their own skate team, reluctantly sponsored by Dustin and his college fund.

After recruiting laid-back ladies man Lou "Sweet Lou" Singer to join their crew and provide the van for their tour, team Super Duper launches the ride of their lives in an outrageous road trip from Chicago to Santa Monica. The professional scene doesn't exactly welcome nobody, but these outsiders stick together through extreme misadventures. In their quest to go pro, they meet professional vert skating champions Bucky Lasek, Bob Burnquist and Pierre Luc Gagnon, skate pro Bam Margera and his crew Preston Lacy, Ehren Danger McGhehey and Jason Wee Man Acuña, as well as sexy skate chick Jamie as they grind handrails across America and force the skateboarding world to give 'em a piece of the action.[2]

Cast

Soundtrack

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A soundtrack consisting of a blend of rock, hip hop and reggae music was released on August 12, 2003 by Atlantic Records.

Critical response

The film received unfavorable reviews from critics. Review aggregate Rotten Tomatoes reports that 8% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 71 reviews, with an average score of 3.1/10.[3] Metacritic gave it an average score of 30 out of 100 from the 24 reviews it collected.[4]

Joe Laydon, of Variety Magazine called the "Skating scenes ... unremarkable and repetitious," concluding that the film was less than good.

Keith Phipps, for The Onion's A.V. Club, said "The film ... will gleam the cube only of viewers with an unusually high tolerance for porta-toilet and Dutch-oven gags."

References

External links