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Packed with incredible action footage on the water and plenty of fun on shore, this epic wave-riding adventure joins 11 world-class surfers on a tour through Western Australia and the Indonesian surfing hot spots on Bali and the Mentawi Islands. Producers Matt Gye and Shagga have gathered an amazingly talented cast, including Jay Davies and Dean Harrington riding some of Australia's biggest barrels and Taj Burrow shredding the best Balinese breaks.

Donavon Frankenreiter, Benji Weatherley and Pat O'Connell are joined by Shane Dorian, three time world champion Andy Irons and Australia's own Mark Occhilupo. Spend two crazy weeks driving, surfing and traveling thru some of Australia's most incredible coastlines. From kangaroos to sky diving, shark scares to golfing the Drive Thru Australia is packed with hilarious hijinks and incredible surfing.

A Matty Gye Film This film puts you in the backseat for a ride into the Australian future. Joel Parkinson, Mick Fanning and Dean Morrison take you into their world around the globe during an entire year through the WCT tour in addition to some epic footage of the renowned superbank.

Is pro surfing a complete lie? Is modern wave-riding being faked for glory and profit? Is Dane Reynolds actually a robot? With trademark humour and a trend-setting soundtrack, Taylor Steele's latest genre-defining action flick pulls back the curtain on pro surfing's deepest, darkest secrets.

A feature film based on the life and experiences to date of Dean “Dingo” Morrison, which tells the story of a young boy’s passion and desire to achieve greatness on the elite surfing stage. Along the way, A DINGO’S TALE touches on the key people that have influenced Dean’s life and witnessed first hand his rise to success – people like Wayne “Rabbit” Batholomew, the 1978 world champion and Deans mentor from a very early age. “Life’s too short; just surf and have fun.” – Dean “Dingo” Morrison

Shot on location in Australia, this creative film directed and produced by surfers Adam Blakey and Oscar Wright features some of the world's best wave riders in a fictional story about a group of degenerate surfer-musicians called Doped Youth who go up against formidable opponent Groovy Avalon (Kelly Slater) in a battle of the bands. The film features plenty of surfing footage with Dean Morrison, Ozzy Wright, James Cato and other top surfers. -

"He's good competitively. He's exciting as a free surfer. Mick's got a big future for sure. "-Kelly Slater (Typically bland,). "He surfs that good it actually pisses people off."-Joel Parkinson (typical Ozzie,), "Mick Fanning rips". Fanning The Fire is an incredible document of the beginning of what was to become a very illustrious career.

Shot in virtually every corner of the earth and shinning an alternate light on the sport of surfing, the film shows how diverse every surfers life is, "A Day In The Life..." could be described as a tale of classic short stories. Shot on brilliant 16-mm film and video, the film has a great blend of water shots and land footage. The variety of camera angles does a great job of capturing the "Surfer's Eye" view. Unique in structure, the film shows just how different the life of every surfer can be. Metallica make a guest appearance in the film and provide music to the soundtrack. The group's guitarist, Kirk Hammett, is featured on the front cover of the DVD.

Back In Town visits exotic locations, capturing exclusive sessions with the world's best surfers. From perfect 10-foot barrels in Tahiti and Hawaii to the epic beach breaks of France, Australia and Brazil. Back In Town has something for everyone! Hop on the Frieden bus and enjoy the best surfers in the world ripping exotic locations worldwide! Locations: Australia, Tahiti, France, South Africa, Hawaii and Brazil.

Chasing Dora is the story of three California surfers who decided to bring to life an epic challenge thrown down by one of surfing's greatest stylists, the renowned maverick, Miki Dora, who died in 2002 at age 67. Dora was one of the sport's iconic figures. He railed against the commercialization of surfing, yet endorsed one of the best-selling surfboard models of the mid-'60s surf boom; he decried competitive surfing, yet still chose to enter some, and floated schemes to promote others; he shunned publicity, yet managed to use the surf media to create an almost mythic persona for himself. Chasing Dora takes on one of his radical ideas--that the ultimate test of a truly great surfer would be in a contest for the longest wave ridden, on a self-made wooden board, with no equipment or accessories that stemmed from the industrial age--no plastics, no neoprene suits, no surf leashes.