All This Mayhem makes great use of the old-school video footage but it all seems a little bit too grimy and irritating. These sequences are counteracted by the high resolution talking heads and the two styles don't sit well together, creating a clunky and disjointed aesthetic from start to finish. Still, the film's subject matter and pace remains strong as we travels down some very disturbing avenues. All This Mayhem is not a celebration of skating but a celebration of what skating meant to the individual during a specific period. In the opening minutes of the film one young skater films his friends and asks them why they skate. The film also demonstrates the dangers of hardcore drug taking and the power it can have over those not in a safe state of mind. As the film draws near to its end one of the brothers delivers a heartbreaking line, stating that the drugs that came with their skating success lead them to the lives that they originally tried to escape from, through skating. Once upon a time, two young boys skated to stay out of trouble and All This Mayhem is the tragic story of how their talents eventually lead to the disaster they so desperately wanted to avoid initially. In the film's second half skateboarding becomes less of a focus and it becomes a deeper documentary because of this. With skateboarding now a fainter presence, the film-makers manage to get into the film's underlying issues surrounding the nature vs. nurture debate and whether we make our own fate or, as it seems it was for the Pappas brothers, is our fate sealed from the get go? All in all, All This Mayhem looks a little too grungy but has a powerful story at its heart that stops its main characters, about whom there is very little to like, from detracting from what it has to say about the danger of drugs in the hands of the naive and deluded.
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