Stoked: The Rise And Fall Of Gator review

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Two years ago, former kick-flipper Stacy Peralta gave us Dogtown And Z-Boys, an exceptional documentary about skateboarding's scruffy, haphazard '70s rebirth. Although largely upbeat on the sport's shift from parochial, lo-fi craze to scuffed-up subculture, the celebration did come with a sting: namely, the fate of precocious talent Jay Adams, whose tenuous grip on his newfound fame slipped into the ego wilderness of substance abuse.

An unofficial sequel of sorts, Stoked picks up the story where Peralta's account tails off, grabbing the leash and splashing its '80s skateboys from moshpit to mainstream. Bailing on Dogtown's scratchy edits, Stoked certainly isn't as artful as its predecessor, but what it has over Peralta's movie is a jowl-ironing sense of melodrama: Jay Adams' fate is a mild abrasion compared to the grim destiny of Mark `Gator' Rogowski.

Hell is a halfpipe: this tragedy of a swashbuckling skate-stud gone bad is outstanding. You'll laugh, you'll flinch, you'll watch it again.

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