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The Endless Summer Collection
 
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The Endless Summer Collection (1994)

Robert August , Patrick O'Connell , Bruce Brown    PG   DVD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

The Endless Summer Collection
36% buy the item featured on this page:
The Endless Summer Collection 4.5 out of 5 stars (10)
The Endless Summer
32% buy
The Endless Summer 4.7 out of 5 stars (99)
$11.99
The Endless Summer II
19% buy
The Endless Summer II 4.4 out of 5 stars (68)
$17.49
Riding Giants (Special Edition)
7% buy
Riding Giants (Special Edition) 4.8 out of 5 stars (92)
$15.99

Product Details


Special Features

  • Includees The Endless Summer, The Endless Summer II, and The Endless Summer Revisited

Editorial Reviews

Product Description

Splash back into the surf with the landmark series that shaped half a century and changed the world of surfing forever! The breakthrough film for surfing's premiere filmmaker, Bruce Brown, The Endless Summer rides the globe in search of the perfect wave with California surfers pursuing their dream from West Africa to Tahiti. Then paddle back out for the spray, speed and spills of The Endless Summer II, which picks up the adventure with a pair of surfing pros from Hawaii's Waimea to the Australian Shark's Bay. Conclude your journey with The Endless Summer Revisited, a collaboration between Bruce Brown and his son, Dana, featuring never-before-seen footage from the original classic complete with incredible footage of fifteen-foot walls of water and the further pursuit of life's greatest pleasure, the perfect wave. Filled with breathtaking scenery and all the fun and foam you could possibly want, this classic trilogy will make it summer in your home all year long!

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10 Reviews
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 (3)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Classics you cannot miss . . ., June 1, 2004
This review is from: The Endless Summer Collection (DVD)
These films are like the 80's movies that made everything that mattered happen. Ferris, Goonies, Breakfast Club, etc . . . except they are surfing classics, epic documentaries if you will.

**Bruce Brown has the classic surfer aesthetic, and narrates each film poignantly and humorously.

Endless Summer 1 is the classic older film, paced a little more slowly and fun-lovingly. It sets a great preface to Endless 2, an incredible multi-hemisphere journey.

Both films have excellent cinematography as well as dialogue and interplay between characters. Endless 2 is as goofily trivial as it is deep, as beautiful as it is mundane. . .

There are gorgeous scenery shots that do Cape Town, Indonesia, Figi, (my fav) and Alaska, justice as incredible places not only to surf, but also to just be.

Our two fascinating and yin and yang protagonists, 1, a Pat O'Connell gives suffusively satisfying short board licks, and 2, a. wing-nut supplies all of the long board smoothness to coalesce.

Five stars, in my to 25 of all time. A truly beautiful film made by those who love life.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars More than surfing, August 13, 2007
This review is from: The Endless Summer Collection (DVD)
This is a fascinating collection of films that span several decades. Of course, this is a must-see for anyone interested in surfing. However, it also has value to people who might never set foot on a board.

Endless Summer I was filmed in the early 60s, when most of the world was unaware of surfing. Two young surfers set out on a bold journey around the world to find new places to surf. Much of the entertainment in this film comes from the different cultures and characters they meet around the world. One of my favorites was an intriguing experience with an African village. This film is considered a classic documentary in the surfing world, and it probably had a lot to do with the spread of surfing around the world.

Endless Summer II was filmed almost 30 years after the first one, but it was filmed by the same man and includes one of the original surfers from the first film. Modern advances in surfing and filming are quite evident after watching the two films together. ESII has some dramatic surfing video, including remarkable footage from some of today's most famous surfers. Two new young surfers follow a similar path to ESI, including visits to some of the same places along with new places (e.g., Costa Rica). As with ESI, the film is as much about the characters and cultures as the surfing.

The third part of The Endless Summer Collection is a nice follow-up to the first two documentaries. You get a lot of behind the scenes stories about the films and how they came to be. If you enjoyed the Endless Summer films, you will be interested to see what has happened to some of the characters and to learn more about the story behind the films.

I don't know how you can watch this collection without wanting to go out to the beach and get on a board!
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Fine Gifts, But Not The Finest, From One of Surfing's Ambassadors To the World, June 18, 2009
By J. E. Barnes (Bayridge, Brooklyn, New York) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
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This review is from: The Endless Summer Collection (DVD)
Bruce Brown's 'The Endless Summer' (1964) was his first nationally distributed surf film, and also the first on which he spent more than six months on the filming and editing. After a slightly shaky start, 'The Endless Summer,' which features a haunting instrumental theme by the Sandals, eventually became a worldwide hit both critically and commercially, and is recognized today as a sports documentary classic.

However, 'The Endless Summer' isn't necessarily better than Brown's excellent, if more amateurish, first five surf films ('Slippery When Wet,' 1958, 'Surf Crazy,' 1959, 'Barefoot Adventure,' 1960, 'Surfing Hollow Days,' 1961, and the compilation film, 'Waterlogged,' 1962), which have only recently found wide distribution via The Bruce Brown Golden Years Of Surf Collection 1958-1963.

In fact, Brown's earlier efforts are in many ways somewhat better. Though 'The Endless Summer' is more professionally filmed, more tightly framed by the quest alluded to in the title, and somewhat more polished and 'dignified,' it also has some faults the earlier, more exuberant films lack.

The most pronounced of these are the scenes filmed in Accra, Ghana, where Brown's narration as the surfers interact with the African natives often comes across as smarmy at worst and awkward at best, even for those [thankfully] politically incorrect times.

Brown was used to publicly poking good-hearted fun at his surfing buddies, but he intermittently falls on his face when applying the same Westernized cultural formula to pass judgment on a people "who had probably never seen a white man before." Suggesting that the Ghanese fishermen might be cannibals, for example, was both too obvious a bad joke and simply in poor taste (to be fair to Brown, he says that many viewers have told him that the Ghana scenes are among the film's most memorable).

Additionally, the scenes filmed in equatorial Africa simply aren't very interesting, having, as they do, less to do with actual surfing and more to do with the group's understandable culture shock at their immediate immersion in an utterly strange civilization. Brown should be commended for the honesty of his approach and observations; nonetheless, it's unfortunate his narration on this segment wasn't somewhat more sophisticated.

Once Brown and fellow surfers Robert August and Mike Hyson reach Cape Town to rendezvous with notable local surfer John Whitmore, the film brightens considerably, presumably because Brown, or the entire trio, was back on more comfortable footing. The portion of the film set in South Africa, culminating of the trio's discovery of Cape St. Francis and its "long, utterly perfect waves," is the highpoint of 'The Endless Summer.'

Tall, dark-haired Robert August was the affable, 18-year old son of well-known surfer Blackie August, and had already worked extensively with Brown in earlier films.

Why Brown specifically selected Mike Hynson remains a mystery, though the shorter, blond Hynson certainly made a strong visual contrast to August. There's something slightly off-putting about Hynson, who would go on to have a troubled life but also become a respected board shaper. Presumably, sunnier personalities Brown had used in the past, such as Henry Ford, Kemp Aaberg, or Mike Diffenderfer (or the poker-faced Del Cannon) were unavailable for the extended travel necessary to make the film (scenes of Cannon establishing a record by becoming the first person to surf Japanese coastal waters were filmed for 'The Endless Summer,' but eventually edited out).

'The Endless Summer' additionally takes its audience to Australia, New Zealand, Tahiti, and, briefly, to California and Hawaii. Among the well-known surfers briefly seen are Miki Dora, Nat Young, Phil Edwards, Greg Noll, Corky Carroll, and Butch Van Artsdalen.

Thirty years later, Brown apparently came out of filmmaking retirement to make 'The Endless Summer II' (1994), which features Pat O'Connell and Robert "Wingnut" Weaver on a similar trip in search of the perfect wave while chasing the shifting summer around the globe.

While fairly spirited and clearly well-intentioned, 'The Endless Summer II' is, like Philip Boston's 'Billabong Odyssey' (2003) and Dana Brown's 'Step Into Liquid' (2003), but unlike Stacy Peralta's 'Riding Giants' (2004), too slick and soulless for its own good, and lacks most of the simple charm and vision that made Brown's earlier films so immediate, warm, and three-dimensional. Paradoxically, rarely do technological advances in photography make for better or more evocative surfing documentaries.

The Endless Summer Collection is rounded out with the interesting 'The Endless Summer Revisited' (2000), which features abundant footage of Brown, his son, Dana Brown, Greg Noll, Robert August, Dale Velzy, Nat Young, Hobie Alter, Pat O'Connell, Wingnut Weaver, and other legends of the sport discussing the creation of the films and their impact upon surfing as well as on the larger world.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Just what I hoped it would be.
If you've ever watched "The Endless Summer" over and over again (even if you've never seen "The Endless Summer II"... Read more
Published 4 months ago by mrshvd3

5.0 out of 5 stars endless summer
learn about life in the 1960's its still very cool to watch today.
the whole collection is the best thing ever. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Pamm Neely

5.0 out of 5 stars The Endless Summer Collection
This is truly one of the best surf movie/documentary you will ever see. This is the most amazing footage take to date about what true surfing is all about. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Dennis Twining

4.0 out of 5 stars Wow this came FAST!!
I ordered this thing with the free 5-7 business day shipping, and it came literlly in the next day or so.

The movies themselves are great...the 2nd is the best. Read more
Published 19 months ago by Z-Man

5.0 out of 5 stars my brother took my set!
My brother liked this set so much I now have to order another copy!
Great service.
Published on April 8, 2008 by MM

5.0 out of 5 stars The endless wave
The Endless Summer Collection is great. Being a surfer for 20 yrs. There are few movies/documentries out there that capture the pure eurphoric state of mind surfing gives and... Read more
Published on April 8, 2007 by Ricky E. Sandiford

4.0 out of 5 stars Brian Brown career retrospective, outstanding
Separtate Ratings: Endless Summer ***.5 stars
Endless Summer II *** stars
The Filming of the Endless Summer ***-
Published on January 11, 2006 by Ricahrd A. Salzer

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