Wendy Ide 

Maya and the Wave review – spotlight on the Brazilian surfer triumphing over a riptide of sexism

Breathtaking footage of Maya Gabeira invigorates a crowd-pleasing doc about her breakthrough in a world of fragile male egos
  
  

Maya and the Wave.
A formidable challenge… Maya and the Wave. Photograph: PR

It takes a certain kind of personality to be drawn to big wave surfing: ultra-competitive, driven, as close to fearless as it’s possible to get. And until Brazilian surfer Maya Gabeira came along, it was a world that was almost exclusively male. Gabeira’s decision to try to match the men was met with a wave of hostility as formidable as any of the building-sized ocean swells that she attempted to surf. This is not, it has to be said, the most flattering portrait of the sport and the fragile-egoed alpha males that populate it. Leaning heavily on a wealth of breathtaking slow-motion surf footage, Stephanie Johnes’s crowd-pleasing documentary tracks Gabeira’s triumph over industry sexism and a catastrophic wipeout that nearly cost her career and her life. Stirring stuff.

  • In UK and Irish cinemas

Watch a trailer for Maya and the Wave.
 

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