It’s in the joy of skating in illegal spaces and running from the cops when they interrupt.

At first glance, they are nothing but skateboarding slackers who spend their lives drinking and thrill-seeking because they have little incentive to do anything else with their lives.

it is a video 8 camera, not a hi8.New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be castPress J to jump to the feed. Jonah Hill moves behind the camera in ‘Mid90s’ By Michael Bergeron, Correspondent Oct. 22, 2018 Updated: Oct. 23, 2018 11:10 a.m. Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Reddit Pinterest The result is the movie that ends a bit out of left field, but no less in the 90s than when we went in. I have this exact camera with an opteka 37mm fisheye lens. This was pretty common for skaters to do back then and now. The point is in the t-shirt parade worn by Stevie and his friends, referencing everything from Ren & Stimpy to D.A.R.E.The point is in the gaggle of girls at which Stevie stares at in wonder, with their knit spaghetti-strap halter crops, phat pant jeans and butterfly-clipped hairdos. It sounds like a set-up for life lessons learned, but this is a movie less interested in sweeping moral ideals than of a precise capture of a very specific time and place at the cusp of the internet era.For those who were teenagers in the mid-90s, seeing a period piece nail every detail of how that era felt will be a nostalgia trip, while also a reminder of how far away that time is from our own. The point is in the shape of the film itself -- filmed in 4:3 ratio, the way TV screens used to be shaped. Fourth Grade may not even be able to afford socks, but he’s constantly recording everything around him on a home video camera, with a wild dream that one day he could make a film like the one we’re watching.But their stories aren’t really heading anywhere, at least not yet. Written and directed by Jonah Hill, who is mostly known for comedies, “Mid-90s” is more of a nostalgia trip aimed for a generation who might want to go back to that, at least for an hour and 20 odd minutes, than a funny movie his audiences might expect.Hill’s directorial debut is best described as a slice-of-life film, a rambling sort of coming-of-age story without a plot to actually go anywhere or do anything. The accepted norm between when an era happened and when the media turns their gaze back to it seems to be 20 years, which is probably why the new film “Mid-90s” on the big screen follows the Netflix 1990s series “Everything Suck” on the small one. You can see the character "4th grade" using this one camera all the time in the movie and I'd just love to know what kind of camera that is. But in the corner of Stevie’s gaze, Ray is trying to keep sober, with his eyes on turning pro (towards the end, a Tony Hawk like figure is seen taking his information down, a suggestion his focus will pay off.) I loved it and it inspired me to skate and also to make a little video of my friends skating. If you want the actual quality and aesthetic of the footage, I’d suggest doing some research and buying a vintage camera and getting a …

Na-kel Smith gives a breakout performance as Ray, quietly forming the gravitational center around which the rest of the group of skater punks revolve.