75
Metascore
8 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 83ColliderRoss BonaimeColliderRoss BonaimeUntil the Wheels Fall Off could’ve maybe explored Hawk’s personal life with a bit more focus, but Jones still creates a captivating, edge-of-your-seat documentary that manages to make the idea of landing a trick a genuinely moving scenario.
- 81TheWrapLena WilsonTheWrapLena Wilson“Until the Wheels Fall Off” works better as a humanistic exploration than it does as a biography, making its Hawk focus occasionally feel like a weakness.
- 80SlashfilmEthan AndertonSlashfilmEthan AndertonThis is the definitive chronicle of Tony Hawk's incredible rise to become the face of modern skateboarding. ... Though the documentary could have been tightened up a little bit, "Tony Hawk: Until the Wheels Fall Off" is still a thoroughly captivating film about one of the most famous figures in sports.
- 80Los Angeles TimesNoel MurrayLos Angeles TimesNoel MurrayThis lively and at times moving film explains, eloquently, why Hawk has endured in popular culture — and why he can’t stop risking his bones to master the maneuvers few can do.
- 75The PlaylistChristian GallichioThe PlaylistChristian Gallichio“Until the Wheels Fall Off” may not, no pun intended, reinvent the wheel of sports documentaries. But it’s a compelling dive into skateboarding culture from 1980 onwards and helps to illustrate just how important Hawk was to legitimize the sport.
- 74Paste MagazineLex BriscusoPaste MagazineLex BriscusoTony Hawk: Until the Wheels Fall Off is a reckoning of passion told by those who best understand the price of that love story: Hawk, his loved ones and his peers on the board.
- 67ConsequenceClint WorthingtonConsequenceClint WorthingtonSkating fans and Hawk aficionados will find a lot to like ... But it’s frustrating to see Jones’ approach fail to dig much deeper into the man than we’d already expect, opting instead to more broadly elaborate on the low-key death wish a lot of skaters seem to engage in.
- 63RogerEbert.comNick AllenRogerEbert.comNick AllenTony Hawk: Until the Wheels Fall Off shines brightest when it resembles something like the Alex Honnold free-climbing documentary "Free Solo," honing in on Hawk's episodes of hard-earned failure, of slamming his body to the ground countless times and getting back on the board.