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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Mexican Surf Safari, Joel Tudor Style, August 30, 2001
"Siestas y Olas" is the second movie by filmmaker Dan Wozniak (aka DanO), who put together "Ten Toes Over" a couple of years earlier. "Ten Toes Over" was a surf movie in the classic sense, featuring great longboarding by Tom Wegener and Joel Tudor, corny humor, a narrative reminiscient of Bruce Brown's old movies, and a lot of California, Baja, and Mexico action. It was shown theatre-style along the Cali coast as well as the East Coast and Texas, and was released in 1996 on video.DanO returned to familiar ground with "Siestas..." with the same good longboarding, corny (almost lame) humor, and a good mix of soulful guitar and authentic south-of-the-border music. At the time this was made, Wozniak was the only guy still touring around the country with a surf movie shot on film, part of the scene that we had lost with the advent of the surf video. Other filmmakers have since followed in his footsteps, notably such movies as "Imagine: Surfing as Sadhana." The premise of the film is simple: a three-month winter surf trip into the heart of Mexico, starting in Baja and getting as far south as Puerto Escondido. The movie stars longboard sensations Josh Farberow and Tom Wegener, with guest appearances by Joel Tudor in Puerto and Marc Kavanagh, an Aussie that hooks up with them shortly before reaching Puerto. The movie starts off with a cool vibe, getting into the cultural details of their ride (a beater suburban from Montana, sans A/C, FM radio, or working power windows) and the various local towns. Baja is skimmed-over quickly, with a touch of footage of small Scorpion Bay, before the ferry hits the main island. Throughout, most of the surfing action is on longboards, with Josh occasionally trading in for a standard thruster on the hollower stuff, and Marc sticking to his shortboard for the duration. The quality of the movie is a vast improvement over "Ten Toes Over" which was frequently overexposed or shaky. DanO uses only film, and puts together some good water shots on the smaller days, sticking to the beach when it gets big. And it does get big! After a lot of smallish stuff at right and left-hand point breaks, the movie winds up a third act with several days' worth of solidly overhead to double-overhead Puerto. Snapped boards galore on the biggest and thickest days, and a lot of mind-blowing barrels, especially by Joel, who makes a good case in this film for being one of the worlds best surfers on any board in any conditions. The film climaxes with some truly harrowing shots of Tom and Marc charging out-of-control cloudbreaks at Petacalco. After 90 minutes of mellow times, lobster, and cervezas, the final 10 minutes will pump you back up again. Legitimately 15'-20' Hawaiian-style mackers shoaling and reeling and pounding their victims all the way to the beach. DanO has a hard time getting many good shots, lacking a boat or cliff vantage point like Peahi, Mavericks, or Waimea, so I didn't see as much as I would have liked. What I saw was epic surf with only two guys out, somewhere in the heart of Mexico at the tail end of a long journey away from home. See this one!
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