SummaryDragonslayer documents the transgressions of a lost skate punk falling in love in the stagnant suburbs of Fullerton, California in the aftermath of Americaʼs economic collapse. Taking the viewer through a golden SoCal haze of broken homes, abandoned swimming pools and stray glimpses of unusual beauty, Dragonslayer captures the life and times... Read More
Directed By:Tristan Patterson
Dragonslayer
Metascore
Generally Favorable
71
User score
Mixed or Average
5.2
My Score
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Metascore
Generally Favorable
71
73% Positive
8 Reviews
8 Reviews
18% Mixed
2 Reviews
2 Reviews
9% Negative
1 Review
1 Review
Nov 2, 2011
91
With its propulsive punk-rock soundtrack and beautifully rough cinematography, Dragonslayer makes you care about this scrawny young man, skating to nowhere.
Nov 1, 2011
80
Nothing like a traditional social-issue doc, Patterson's one-of-a-kind hybrid captures a socio-historical moment with the kind of charged authenticity that only comes from a willingness to embrace contradictions: It's discursive and hypnotic, laconic and urgent.
User score
Mixed or Average
5.2
50% Positive
3 Ratings
3 Ratings
17% Mixed
1 Rating
1 Rating
33% Negative
2 Ratings
2 Ratings
Jun 8, 2013
5
This documentary can be viewed in a variety of ways, a skateboarding tutorial of how not to, a parenting class of also, well, how not to or what I believe the film is trying to accomplish, a chronicle of Josh "Skreech" Sandoval, an skateboarder who, in a nutshell, has thrown his life away and is attempting to rebuild it. But unfortunately the film fails to make a likeable character out of Skreech, from one disastrous life choice to the next. So Skreech is a dad to a little baby called Sid, someone who is seen very little throughout the film, at first glance I though the film was being told out of order, but no, he is seen talking to his child and then taking off to Copenhagen to compete in a skating contest, and after that he has a girlfriend, not the mother of his child, but someone he met continuously over a few years. He spends his time with a band of misfit skateboarders who quite frankly are more interesting than he is. A particular case of his reckless behaviour is himself and his girlfriend driving along a highway, smoking a bong, he truly is painted as someone who has very little regard for anyone but himself. While the documentary in essence is very well presented, the material is just not concerning enough to care. The cinematography is amateur but this is done purposely to capture a more lifelike and POV of Skreech and is happenings, along with a very punk-rock attitude of a soundtrack, as a style of filmmaking this is top notch and entertaining, from the chaptered moments of Skreech and his foibles to the fast paced cuts in the film. The most difficult thing when watching this documentary is trying to figure out what we are supposed to take away from it, if anything. This person does seem to live his life how he sees fit, with no repercussions to his existing girlfriend or even his child, who he has only taken out alone once. While is girlfriend seems to grow increasingly sorry for her boyfriend, well, at least someone does. Certainly a unique style of filming, but the material doesn't do this style any justice, and its hard to feel any emotions towards someone who seems to be irresponsible of every action he takes. With little to take away from the film, it could be a forgettable affair indeed.
May 28, 2012
0
Being a skateboarder I wish I could like this movie. Over an hour worth of footage for the court to make a great judgment call of him not being fit to interact with a child. The skating was beyond sub-par. Definitely laughed out loud. Aside from this review in hopes to save someone the 70 minutes of their life I will pretend I have never seen this film. No offense Screech. Just get a clue homie.
Dec 15, 2011
75
Dragonslayer documents what happened when California stopped dreaming.
Nov 12, 2011
70
The film observes a guy verging on poverty or riches with a bounty of beautiful imagery and fresh angles on skateboarding culture.
Nov 4, 2011
70
Seamlessly dovetailing style and subject, Dragonslayer, a poetic and affectionate portrait of the professional skateboarder Josh Sandoval.
Nov 12, 2011
60
The portrait is dispiriting overall, inspiring little affection from viewers, but feels authentic and fair.
Nov 7, 2011
12
Is Josh "Skreech" Sandoval the least deserving documentary subject ever?
May 23, 2012
0
A movie about a homeless skateboarder who smokes and drinks way too much all while contributing nothing to society or the story. I love indie movies, but find nothing artistic **** real story to be told. Loser wannabe skateboarder has a son he barely sees. He has a very cute girlfriend he drags down with him. The majority of the time he stoned and hammered drunk, barely functioning. He scrounges up money from garage sales so he can travel to the next low rent skateboarding competition where he wins $90...then decides to travel the country with his gf. That doesn't work out, so they end up in a crappy apartment with some old stoner while the main character gets a mainstream minimum wage job. What a story.
Production Company:
- Doc Society
- Animals of Combat
- Killer Films
Release Date:Nov 4, 2011
Duration:1 h 48 m
Tagline:The future of a nation lies in the strength of its youth.
Awards
Cinema Eye Honors Awards, US
• 4 Nominations
SXSW Film Festival
• 1 Win & 2 Nominations
Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination




























