Jenny MarderSurfing is like coffee for Dave...
Jenny Marder
Surfing is like coffee for Dave Carlos. If he hasn’t surfed in a few
days, he gets moody and restless.
Carlos started surfing the north side of the Huntington Beach Pier
when he was 12. He remembers growing up through a series of surf
moves -- doing his first cutbacks, catching his first tube ride,
landing his first barrel. He remembers the excitement of seeing
celebrities like Randy Lewis and Bud Llamas in the water.
And Carlos, now 38, remembers the old Surf Theater on 5th Street,
where he used to file in with friends and fellow surfers to view
classics like “Five Summer Stories,” “Many Classic Moments” and “Bali
High.”
“There’s no other feeling in the world like surfing,” Carlos said.
“You’re standing on the water.”
To the delight of many Surf City surf bums, Carlos and his wife,
Leslie, are breathing life into the old tradition, which died when
the surf theater was torn down in 1989 and replaced by a parking lot.
As soon as the husband and wife team rented out the Mann Pierside
Pavilion Downtown for the first time in November to showcase local
filmmaker Timmy Turner’s “Burning the Map,” the idea caught a wave --
a big wave. Over the past several months, their company, Big Red
Productions, has been holding three shows a month and has expanded
surf theater to other cities like Santa Monica, Encinitas and
Ventura.
Next week, they will host their first full-fledged film festival,
scheduled to coincide with the U.S. Open of Surfing. From Tuesday
through Saturday, the festival will showcase two surf or skate videos
every evening at the Downtown theater and will feature the world
premieres of “The Modus Mix,” a film about female surfers, and “Push”
the latest from popular surfer Shane Beschen as well as “Crossing the
Line,” “Punk and Disorderly” and “Wow.”
Also included are the 1977 16-millimeter classic “Many Classic
Moments,” “16 Below, Vol. 2,” which features 16 and under skaters,
“Rise Above” and “Heart of the Sea.”
The atmosphere is playful and spirited and the theater frequently
packed. Like the old theater, people hoot, holler, throw popcorn and
toss beach balls around as surfers catch waves. The movies often lack
a cohesive plot, Leslie Carlos, said, but the audience seems less
interested in the plot than the waves.
“It’s just a bunch of people hooting and hollering and getting all
stoked on surfing,” Dave Carlos said. “As soon as you get done with
the movie, you want to get out and surf.”
One of the most buzzed-about films is a special directors cut of
Huntington Beach surfer Jessie Marley’s new film, “The Next
Generation,” a documentary that boasts tons of Huntington Beach
footage and interviews with several local surfers.
Marley, 26, used to be a pro-snowboarder, but after three knee
surgeries, decided to give up the snow for the surf, a sport that he
admits can be just as dangerous.
His movies, which he films, produces and edits, are filmed in
exotic locales like Hawaii, Costa Rica and Indonesia.
“I’m trying to show the new progression of surfers.” Marley said,
adding that he is often shocked by how fearless the new crop of young
surfers can be. “They’re starting to do crazy flips and huge airs.
They’re dropping into the wave that will kill you.”
Showing his films on the big screen brings back memories for
Marley, who used to go to the old surf theater with his dad.
“I see the parents that used to go to the surf theater and they’re
taking their own kids,” Dave Carlos said.
Carlos and his wife, who say that their mission is to set the
stage for today’s legends, have loftier goals than just showing
movies in Huntington Beach. They hope to some day follow the
professional circuits and take surf theater worldwide.
“It doesn’t matter what language you speak, everyone’s stoked on
surfing,” Dave Carlos said. “We’re bringing everyone together. We’re
trying to bring that feeling back.”
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