Professional skateboarder Todd Falcon is planning to announce his retirement from skateboarding and get into business with his friend, Deane MacKay, owner of Insanity Skate Park. However, th... Read allProfessional skateboarder Todd Falcon is planning to announce his retirement from skateboarding and get into business with his friend, Deane MacKay, owner of Insanity Skate Park. However, the plans dramatically change when Falcon instantly falls for MacKay's biggest competitor, J... Read allProfessional skateboarder Todd Falcon is planning to announce his retirement from skateboarding and get into business with his friend, Deane MacKay, owner of Insanity Skate Park. However, the plans dramatically change when Falcon instantly falls for MacKay's biggest competitor, Jade Sanford, when he sees her at one of his retirement demos. In his quest to romance Jade... Read all
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Take for instance this offering. Minor, passable entertainment, "Call to Fly" is inoffensive and funny, moving at a leisurely pace and filled with some decently filmed skating sequences.
The story is threadbare but serves its purpose. Todd Falcon, respected skateboard jockey and all around nice guy plans to retire from the circuit and concentrate on running the Insanity skate park with his friend Deane. His plans get convoluted when he starts to develop a crush on Jade Sanford (Rebecca Torrellas), who has just inherited a rival skating park. Their blossoming relationship is threatened, however, by the interference of an evil oil tycoon (since J.R. on "Dallas," has any oil tycoon been good?) who owns the land Jade's park leases and wants to demolish it. I don't recall what he intended to use the land for, probably for a baby-killing factory, a Starbucks or something else equally dreadful. Oh, and he wants Jade for himself, too.
Jade's father ran a skateboarding club for underprivileged kids, and she feels guilty, among other things, that it will be shut down following the closure of her park. The rest of the film involves hosting a skateboarding event for fund-raising, musical acts, and budding love between the main characters (No, not Todd and the oil tycoon! Todd and Jade!) "Call to Fly" is a fairly crude film, mostly shot in a series of quick takes that constantly jump between characters. For this, the reactions between the characters don't always flow well. The story is frequently interrupted with skateboarding montages and at times the romance seems a little forced.
However, the movie isn't bad. It's mostly an innocent romp, the actors all seem to be having fun, and Falcon is a good enough director to know how long a scene should be, which puts him light years ahead of most directors at this level. Todd and Rebecca make a cute couple, not surprising given that they're a real life couple, too. The skateboarding tricks are pretty interesting to watch, and despite following the cliché "Let's save the *fill in the blank* from the evil industrialist" motif, the movie does manage a few nice surprises.
At one point in the film, the characters are attacked en masse by a hoard of the oil tycoon's henchmen. A long fight breaks out, which manages to entertain quite well. Obviously, it pales in comparison with, say, the bathroom rumble in "The Warriors," but for a low-budget comedy, it almost seems like an homage to the old live-action Adam West "Batman" series, only missing the "Bam!" and "Ooof!" onomatopoeias.
Really, for a movie aimed at kids, it's all in good fun. If you're interested in seeing an example of a creative micro-budget offering, this is a fine example. It would be interesting to see what director/star Falcon could do with a much higher budget.
Six out of ten stars. It was entertaining, which is what any film should be.
Did you know
- TriviaThe Insanity Skatepark location was originally Vans Skatepark, which closed before a lot of the footage could have been finished. Third Coast Skatepark was later used, and closed after we had enough footage for only one of the demos in the movie. The line Todd says of "remodeling" was added so we could mix both parts of the footage and still have continuity for the second Insanity demo. Humble Skatepark was re-painted towards the end of filming and we had to redo a lot of the skating so continuity wouldn't be blown. The crew learned a year later that Humble repainted the park as a tribute to one of their volunteers who had died in a motorcycle accident four days after one of the shoots.
- SoundtracksTinsel Life
Squint
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- Budget
- $50,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
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