Dogtown is a 1997 American drama film by George Hickenlooper about life in the small town of Cuba, Missouri starring Mary Stuart Masterson, Jon Favreau, Rory Cochrane, Harold Russell, and Natasha Gregson Wagner.
A failed actor returns to his small hometown, unaware that he has become a local celebrity. Taking advantage of his newfound fame, he attempts to impress an old unrequited crush who has fallen on hard times.
The film was shot entirely in Torrance, California. Hickenlooper intentionally tried to make Ezra Good, Jon Favreau's character, compelling and worthy of the audience's interest despite his racism. Shooting took 24 days. Russell's part was written for him, though he had to be persuaded to take the role.
Dogtown premiered at the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival in April 1997.
Todd McCarthy of Variety described the film as an "occasionally amusing" melodrama, but also noted that "while a largely excellent cast keeps viewer interest from flagging, this [...] low-key melodrama has too soft a center," that "Masterson injects the one note of genuine feeling into a film whose portrait of small-town denizens perilously comes to resemble a freak show," and that Hickenlooper "pushes everything too far into caricature and, near the end, needless melodrama."