Do you remember the first ski movie you watched? Maybe it was a Warren Miller film in a high school auditorium or Hot Dog鈥he Movie from a friend鈥檚 1980s bean bag or a TGR flick seen back when VCRs still existed. Regardless, it was likely a memorable experience. Ski movies transport us鈥攊nto the mountains, into winter, into a whimsical way of life. 鈥淎 good ski film locks those moments in time,鈥 freestyle ski pioneer Glen Plake says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e like time machines. It鈥檚 an opportunity for us to go to that place at that time with those skiers and ride along on the journey with them.鈥
There鈥檚 no bad time of year to watch a ski movie, but there鈥檚 a reason new shred flicks tend to premiere just before winter hits: they听get us excited for the snow-filled season ahead. We asked Plake and pro skier Cody Townsend, both of whom have appeared in dozens of ski films over the years, to help us pick the best classic ski movies to rewatch鈥攐r see for the first time.听One note: the movies listed here are classics and were made before the recent movement to improve representation and accessibility in the outdoor industry. Which means they may feel, for lack of better terms, excessively male and very white. Be sure to cue up newer movies too, like 2020鈥檚 Paha Sapa, last year鈥檚 Mountain Revelations, and , which premiered this fall, for a wider sampling of snowsports athletes.
10. Immersion (2002)
This classic Scott Gaffney film from stars the late Shane McConkey, J.T. Holmes, Robb Gaffney, the late C.R. Johnson, and Skogen Sprang. 鈥淚t has this soulful, mellow, going-out-with-your friends feel to it,鈥 Townsend says. 鈥淚t transcends time. It鈥檚 not about the performance, it鈥檚 about the act of skiing.鈥 You鈥檒l be treated to 31 minutes of cliff drops, powder turns, and steep spines skied by some of the sport鈥檚 biggest legends of that era. Immersion also includes an inspiring segment with McConkey and Make-a-Wish Foundation recipient Adam Baillargeon, who go skiing together at McConkey’s home hill, now known as Palisades Tahoe.
9. Ski the Outer Limits (1969)
This one belongs in a听ski museum. Ski the Outer Limits, made by Roger Brown and Barry Corbet of Summit Films, is one of Plake鈥檚 favorite classic films. The skiers in this movie鈥攕hot on film cameras in the 1960s鈥攚ere among the first freestyle skiers. 鈥淭hese were the skiers who said, 鈥榃e鈥檙e going to run our own course and do things that nobody else has done,鈥欌 Plake says. 鈥淭he famous front flip into Corbet鈥檚 in the old days, that鈥檚 from Ski the Outer Limits. That was unheard of at that time.鈥
8. Ski Country (1984)
Ski Country鈥Warren Miller鈥檚 35th film鈥攈as lots of forms of skiing in it, from mountaineering to moguls to even water and grass skiing. 鈥淚 first watched this film when I was six years old then watched it over and over for years on end,鈥 Townsend says. 鈥淚t has a classic Scot Schmidt segment on KT-22 at what鈥檚 now Palisades Tahoe, where he makes turns under the old KT chair without a single track in the distance and sends the Fingers on 220-centimeter-long skis. That was a groundbreaking shot.鈥 There鈥檚 also a thrilling World Cup downhill segment.
7. Believe (2007)
Produced and directed by Constantine Papanicolaou of , this throwback film is one of X Games star and freeskiing icon Tanner Hall鈥檚 landmark projects, and one Townsend calls 鈥渦nbelievable.鈥 You鈥檒l find shots of Hall blasting off powdery pillows in oversized pants set to reggae music, alongside a crew of his friends, including C.R. Johnson, Seth Morrison, and Dan Treadway, skiing in places like Japan, Alaska, and Canada. Up-and-comers Sean Pettit and Kye Petersen鈥攏ow established pro skiers鈥攁ppear as young rippers on the rise.
6. Aspen Extreme (1993)
Aspen Extreme is the movie that put ski bum culture on the Hollywood map. Friends Dexter Rutecki and T.J. Burke follow their dreams from the Midwest to a little town called Aspen, Colorado, where they get jobs as ski instructors and compete in the famous Powder 8 contest. There鈥檚 drama, there鈥檚 an avalanche, there鈥檚 deep friendship鈥攂asically all the things you still find in a ski town, making it a cult-classic that鈥檚 still beloved听decades later. The film, which starred actors Peter Berg and Paul Gross, was based on the real-life experiences of writer and director Patrick Hasburgh.
5. Yearbook (2004)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjYlero3y1o
It鈥檚 2004 and Shane McConkey is king of the class (and the ultimate goofball). But Yearbook, from Matchstick Productions, has standout performances from other skiers, too, including a notable breakout segment from now legendary big-mountain skier听Ingrid Backstrom, who stomps her first major ski movie. 鈥淚ngrid鈥檚 segment set a new benchmark,鈥 Townsend says. 鈥淪ame with Mark Abma and Hugo Harrisson.鈥 There are appearances from Mike Douglas, Eric Pollard, Chris Davenport, Seth Morrison and Tanner Rainville in the film, as well.
4. Teddybear Crisis (2006)
This indie flick was produced on a low budget and with minimal equipment by a trio of filmmakers-slash-skiers鈥擧enrik Rostrup, Kris Ostness, and Howie Arnstad. It has garnered a cult following on the internet and really captured听what was revolutionary about freeskiing at that time. 鈥淲hat a groundbreaking film,鈥 Townsend says. 鈥淭he music was so good, and the editing was so different from other ski movies.鈥 Known for its beloved soundtrack, the film stars all the heavy hitters of that era鈥擲imon Dumont, Tanner Hall, Jon Olsson, Sage Cattabriga-Alosa, Sammy Carlson, Mike Wilson, and more.
3. Dumb and Dumber (1994)
Sure, this slapstick comedy isn鈥檛 technically a ski movie, but Townsend would argue otherwise. 鈥淚 still rate Dumb and Dumber as the best ski movie of all time,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ecause it is a ski movie. They move to Aspen and go skiing.鈥 Starring Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels, and made by Peter Farrelly and Bobby Farrelly, this is comedic relief听set in a ski town like only the 鈥90s could deliver.
2. All.I.Can (2011)
When All.I.Can came out, nothing like it had been made before. From听,听it was a film festival darling that turned heads for its stunning cinematography鈥攕hot in locations like Chile, Morocco, and Greenland鈥攁nd its documentary-style messaging about climate change and the听need to protect our mountain environments. The goal of this movie isn鈥檛 necessarily to get you pumped for your next powder day, but it will make you proud to be a skier. The alone is worth watching on repeat.
1. Valhalla (2013)
An artsy, wild interpretation of the quest that skiing often takes us on, Valhalla was made by 鈥 Nick Waggoner, Ben Sturgulewski, Michael Brown, and Zac Ramras. 鈥Valhalla captured that ski bum spirit and why we dedicate so much of our lives to this sport,鈥 Townsend says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a romanticized, fabled version of that.鈥 Following one man鈥檚 journey to British Columbia, the film beautifully captures powder skiing set to groovy music and poetic narration. Starring folksy skiers听Cody Barnhill and Sierra Quitiquit, as well as athletes Alex Monot, Pep Fujas, Zack Giffin, Eric Hjorleifson, Molly Baker, and Kazushi Yamauchi, this film is best known for its famous naked skiing scene,听shot at Whitewater ski area, and a mind-boggling snowless ski scene in a lush, green forest in the Northwest.