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Skate Kitchen

Crystal Moselle  •   USA  • ​ 2018
106 mins  •  HD  •  M offensive language, sexual references & drug use
​​

The Wolfpack director returns with a free-wheeling, often funny fiction debut about girl skateboarders in New York City, featuring real-life crew Skate Kitchen.
DIRECTOR: Crystal Moselle
PRODUCERS: Lizzie Nastro, Izabella Tzenkova, Crystal Moselle, Julia Nottingham, Rodrigo Teixeira, Michael Sherman, Matthew Perniciaro
SCREENPLAY: Aslihan Unaldi, Crystal Moselle, Jennifer Silverman
PHOTOGRAPHY: Shabier Kirchner
EDITOR: Nico Leunen
PRODUCTION DESIGNER: Fletcher Chancey
COSTUME DESIGNER: Camille Garmendia
MUSIC: Aska Matsumiya​
WITH: Rachelle Vinberg (Camille), Dede Lovelace (Janay), Nina Moran (Kurt), Ajani Russell (Indigo), Kabrina Adams (Ruby), Jules Lorenzo (Eliza), Brenn Lorenzo (Quinn), Jaden Smith (Devon)

FESTIVALS: Sundance 2018


REVIEW

"A chance meeting on the New York subway between Crystal Moselle and the titular female Skate Kitchen crew led to this vibrant film about freedom and friendship, in which the real-life skaters play versions of themselves.

When Camille (Rachelle Vinberg), a lonely girl from Long Island, injures herself skateboarding, her mum bans her from ever skating again. But skating is everything to Camille. Seeing that a crew she follows on Instagram are going to be at a Lower East Side skate park, she is there in a heartbeat, and not only proves her ability but quickly fits in with everyone. The diverse, staunchly independent group skate together and discuss life in bedroom hangouts, all the while carving out their own unique space at the park. When a boy skater (played by Jaden Smith) attracts Camille’s attention, things get complicated in the group, and she finds herself in a male world, sleeping on a sofa while guys at the other end of the room flick between nature docos, skate videos and porn. There is darkness hanging around the edges of the film, but, while it does owe Larry Clark’s NYC classic a shoutout, this is definitely not Kids. The film’s best scenes, which resonate proudly with a sense of community and camaraderie, are when the crew are skating. The camera moves fluidly with the group as they take Manhattan, while Moselle’s documentary eye gives the film its grounded, observational realism.”

​— Bill Gosden, NZIFF 2018
​


FILM SOCIETY SCREENINGS

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Tuesday 16 June, 6.00pm

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Monday 29 June, 6.15pm

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Monday 14 September, 7.30pm

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​Monday 9 November, 6.00pm

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New Zealand Federation of Film Societies  |  PO Box 9544, Te Aro, Wellington, NZ  
Phone: +64 4 385 0162  |  Fax: +64 4 801 7304  |  Email: 
michael@nziff.co.nz
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • SOCIETIES
    • AUCKLAND
    • HAMILTON
    • TAURANGA
    • NEW PLYMOUTH
    • WHANGANUI
    • PALMERSTON NORTH
    • CARTERTON
    • WELLINGTON
    • NELSON
    • CANTERBURY
    • TIMARU
    • QUEENSTOWN
    • DUNEDIN
    • WESTPORT
  • 2022 SEASON
    • ROBERT ALTMAN
    • SCANDINAVIA
    • BREAKING THROUGH
    • CONTEMPORARY WORLD
    • CLASSIC & CULT
    • NZ FILM
    • FRENCH CONNECTIONS
    • AFRICAN CINEMA
    • GERMAN CINEMA