Synopsis
Follows six extreme sports stars as they prepare for and then compete in the 2008 Summer X-Games in Los Angeles. Kyle Loza practices a new motocross trick, landing in a pit of foam. Can he do it in front of thousands and land safely on dirt? Travis Pastrana shifts from a bike to a rally car - in part because he's broken so many bones. Shaun White finishes his snowboard season and jumps immediately onto his skateboard. Retired motocross champion Ricky Cunningham takes up a new event. In the finale, after practicing together as friends and competitors, Bob Burnquist and Danny Way face off on the mega ramp
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Cast
- Shaun WhiteSelf
- Travis PastranaSelf
- Bob BurnquistSelf
- Ricky CarmichaelSelf
- Kyle LozaSelf
- Emile HirschNarrator
- 70
Chicago Reader
The full-length feature film uses groundbreaking digital 3D techniques to provide an unprecedented all-access pass to the X Games. - 70
Chicago Reader
The full-length feature film uses groundbreaking digital 3D techniques to provide an unprecedented all-access pass to the X Games. - 60
Washington Post
For a quick ticket into the world of extreme sports, the sky-high, adrenaline-gorged stunts captured in X Games will make any spectator gasp, wince and brace with fear. - 60
Washington Post
For a quick ticket into the world of extreme sports, the sky-high, adrenaline-gorged stunts captured in X Games will make any spectator gasp, wince and brace with fear. - 50
The Hollywood Reporter
Only in the loosest sense is X Games 3D: The Movie an actual movie. It is essentially a promotional film for extreme action sports and ESPN. - 50
Village Voice
Steve Lawrence's glitzy infotainment raises the question, "How much awesomeness can an audience take?" - 50
Boston Globe
You’d think the 3-D effects would bring the action closer, but the kooky optics often have the opposite effect, turning the athletes into GI Joe and Boba Fett action figures zipping around a dollhouse set. - 50
Los Angeles Times
An uneven thrill-circus display that too often feels like TV writ large and loud rather than the kind of cinematic reimagining that defined the surf-flick genre.