By James Hebert
Copley News Service
Friend to poultry.
"Let's not forget there's a chicken in this movie, too," the
San Diego County native son is saying, when an interview about the
film "Surf's Up" starts to turn too penguin-centric. "He's pretty
awesome."
Leave it to Machado to stand up for what's right, even though
the celebrated goofy-footer (that's right foot forward on the
board, gremmies) would rather stand up for what's left.
Like, say, the left-peeling wave at his favorite home break,
Seaside Reef. Or the screaming, epic left at Pipeline in Hawaii,
where Machado won the Monster Energy Pro contest last year and the
illustrious Pipe Masters in 2000.
Machado has his own character in "Surf's Up." He's definitely
not the chicken.
He is, however - in the considered analysis of surf observers
over the past 20 years or so - pretty awesome.
From at least age 12, when he won his division of the U.S.
amateur championships, Machado was the Mouse that roared through
contest after contest. "Mouse" being the slender surfer's
childhood nickname.
During the 90s and into this decade, Machado regularly placed
among the top surfers in the world, his famously crazy hair waving
like a freak flag as he dazzled in competitions all over the
globe.
The hair is also a prominent feature of his character in
"Surf's Up," a cartoon movie in which he essentially plays himself
- though as a contest commentator instead of a surfer.
He is voice-cast alongside his pal and fellow surf legend Kelly
Slater, plus X-Games host Sal Masekela.
"I think even before we knew the story line, just the idea of
being involved with an animated movie" got the trio stoked,
Machado says, on the phone from a publicity gig in Hawaii. "And
having your own character? A penguin? It was like, Are you kidding
me? This is going to be insane!"
The hair might not quite do justice to the real deal - as
Machado says, "How do you give a penguin an Afro? What line do you
take on that one? I have no idea."
But one aspect of "Surf's Up" does seem to strike a chord with
Machado. The movie centers on Cody Maverick, an ambitious penguin
surfer who worships a fallen legend of the waves known as Big Z.
It turns out that Z, vexed by contest pressure, faked his own
death and dropped out of sight.
Not that there's been quite that much drama to Machado's recent
history, but he did retire from the world tour, after an injury
and a series of other events that had him rethinking his
relationship to the whole pro scene.
So Machado understands in some ways "the struggle that Z went
through. He was the man, and then all of a sudden he was kind of
getting passed by. He decided to just disappear. It's great, you
know? It's awesome.
"The bummer was that he just went into hiding and stopped
surfing. But it was cool how it took a young kid (Cody) to pull
him back out and get him back in the water."
For Machado, one huge benefit of taking a step back from the
contest world is that it's a reminder of how he got there in the
first place.
"It's like rediscovering why you love surfing," Machado says.
"And why you started surfing."
On tour, he says, "there are those days when you come down to
the beach at a contest, you look at the ocean, and you're
thinking, 'There's no way I would ever paddle out right now.'
"And some guy gives you a jersey and tells you you have to go
out and compete. It's a hard thing, to override your mental state
of just being totally over it, to, 'OK, I'm gonna go out there and
just do it.'"
"So, not being on tour, all of a sudden it opens up all these
doors of excitement, you know? Try this and try that, see where it
goes."
What he's trying at the moment is movies, and while Machado has
no immediate plans to go Hollywood, he didn't hesitate to sign up
for "Surf's Up" when he heard about it.
"I was into it totally from day one," he says. "I have kids, so
I've seen just about every animated movie that exists. You just
embrace it.
"And some of the first (animation) they showed us, with the
surfing and the ocean and water textures - we were just like,
'Wow, these guys are on it. They're really dialed in. This stuff
looks incredible.'"
Machado appreciated that the filmmakers wanted to get it right
- or as "right" as a movie can be that features birds on boards.
When it comes to surfing, Hollywood has done much worse.
"They really took our opinions to heart," he says. "It was cool
to say, 'Hey, whoa, rewind this. See that right there? That's not
good.' And they'd fix it.
"So when you watch the animation of surfing, you never really
see anything that you're just like, 'Wow, that's a total blow-it.'
Like the guy in the movie 'North Shore' who takes off goofy-foot,
and then he's a regular-foot. Or he's at Backdoor, then he's at
Sunset or whatever."
Although "Surf's Up" might seem a latecomer to the penguin
party, a waddling wannabe, Machado says the idea actually was in
place before "March of the Penguins" and "Happy Feet" made it cool
to get cold.
"It took a long time," he says. "It's been in the works for a
couple of years. I can't remember when we did our first
voice-overs and even saw our first animation.
"So you can imagine, it was way before all these other penguin
movies came out. Once you're already halfway down the street, and
you find out about these other movies, you're like, Oh well."
Machado is also mapping out the future of the foundation and
the surf contest that bear his name.
The Rob Machado Foundation has been geared toward getting
musical instruments into the hands of local school kids, but
Machado hopes to add an environmental mission to its work.
His popular annual surf contest in San Diego County had gotten
perhaps a bit too big, Machado says, and it failed to go off last
year after running into bureaucratic hurdles. He hopes to
resurrect it in September, although it's probably "going to be
toned down - maybe a one-day event just for kids."
Meanwhile, his mind blissfully far from any thoughts of
competition, Machado just keeps surfing. No dude with a jersey in
sight.
"I surfed Waikiki last night," he reports. "It was like
knee-high - just going off. In Hawaii. Trunks. Can't complain." ©
Copley News Service
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