Stab Magazine | "Murder Mountain" Is An Idealistic, Outlaw Surfer's Cautionary Tale
icon STAB HIGH JAPAN 2025
PRESENTED BY MONSTER ENERGY
MAY 24 & 25 JOIN STAB PREMIUM
Monster Energy
STAB HIGH JAPAN 2025
MAY 24 & 25
JOIN STAB PREMIUM

Live Now: Stab High Japan 2025 Presented By Monster Energy

659 Views

“Murder Mountain” Is An Idealistic, Outlaw Surfer’s Cautionary Tale

There is no easy way out. 

cinema // Jan 17, 2019
Words by Stab
Reading Time: 3 minutes

Murder Mountain, now streaming on Netflix, is ostensibly the story of Garret Rodriguez, a surfer from San Diego, California

Rodriguez went missing in early 2013, while working an illegal Marijuana grow operation up in Northern California. Over the course of six episodes, the filmmakers speak with his family, friends, private investigators, and local residents in an effort to determine exactly what happened to him.  

In addition to the Rodriguez case, the documentary touches on the difficulties experienced by former outlaw growers in the face of legalization and government oversight, the historical roots of marijuana agriculture in the area, and the myriad dangers of operating in a market which ranged from gray to black.

But, really, Murder Mountain is a morality tale about the naivety and danger inherent in looking for an easy way out.

The San Diego surfer’s foray into the hillbilly libertarian nightmare that is Humboldt County began as an attempt to earn enough to money to build his dream surf retreat on a property in Mexico. By all reports the income flowed in fast and heavy, to the point that friends cautioned him to exercise discretion when he would return to Southern California. Tens of thousands of dollars in illicit income begs to be spent. When it seems the flow will never cease, one tends to piss it away.

Manufacturing and selling drugs, even one as benign as marijuana, is a dangerous game.  The lack of legal recourse in the event of robbery, or other violence, necessitates a survivor’s mentality. You have to watch your back, protect your shit. Decide whether you’re willing to resort to violence or are willing to be seen as a push-over.  It’s not fun, it’s not easy and, in the long term, almost everyone is destined to lose.

Garret Rodriguez at home in San Diego, before his mysterious disappearance. Photo courtesy the Rodriguez Family/Lost Coast Outpost

 

Those who cut and run early, get in and out, make a bit then split while the gettin’s good, can pull together a small nest egg in a short period of time. Use it to travel, to move, to purchase some small amount of comfort. But money quickly earned is rarely appreciated and the temptation to go all-in, to stake your future on the chance of a better one, is too great for most. They get sucked in, keep chasing that last big score, until they flame out and everything crumbles around them.

Even those looking to keep it mellow, provide temporary labor on the fringes of the industry, face the risk of victimization and violence. Simple-minded sorts flock to the area in droves looking for work as trimmers—mindless labor that promises to pay well, avoid taxes, and possibly fund whatever leg in life lies next.

But, as the documentary series illustrates, the reality of working twelve hour days for as little as $150, while sleeping rough and contending with the possibility your employer may refuse to let you leave, or simply decline to pay, is hardly superior to a life inside society’s norms.

While many growers are decent sorts, there’s no shortage of scam artists, scumbags, and outright maniacs. The residents of Murder Mountain live outside the law, and so do not hesitate to make their own. There are no peaceful hippy types growing weed and just, like, chilling. Those types are long gone. Either fled over past decades, or metamorphisized into the same cash-hungry capitalists they once sought to leave behind.

At nearly four and a half hours Murder Mountain runs long, but covers a lot of ground.  In addition to the tale of Rodriguez, a story which takes an unsurprising and exceedingly violent twist, the documentary covers the struggles faced by former outlaw operations as they figure out how to deal with legality.  The decline of the black market means permits and taxes and ever shrinking profit margins.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/PZEH67Iy9i0

Murder Mountain also follows the actions of those who continue to refuse to operate with the margins. People who understand that a loss of danger leads to a decline in profit.  However, these are the same growers who allowed a film crew to document their criminal activities, which might lead the average viewer to come to the conclusion that the aforementioned growers are idiots.  Which is a fair opinion, because you shouldn’t ever let someone film you committing a crime.  And anyone with any sense will understand that a bandanna over your face does absolutely nothing to your identity.

The moral of Murder Mountain is a simple one: there is no easy way out.  Everyone grinds to get what they need; those who operate without the protection of the law run the constant risk of becoming victims. In the best case scenario it may cost you some money. In the worst it will cost you your life.

 

Comments

Comments are a Stab Premium feature. Gotta join to talk shop.

Already a member? Sign In

Want to join? Sign Up

Advertisement

Most Recent

Watch The Replay — Day One Of Stab High Japan Presented By Monster Energy

Watch the Opening Round of the Open Men's, Ladybirds, and Bottle Rockets.

May 23, 2025

Watch Julian Wilson, Harry Bryant, Mikey Wright, And More Warm-Up For Stab High Japan Presented By Monster Energy

Episode One of Poolside, brought to you by Kona Big Wave.

May 23, 2025

Matt Meola On Archery, Not Surfing, And Why He Doesn’t Regret Sacrificing $15k At Last Year’s Aerial Altar

"It was for the good of surfing."

May 23, 2025

Watch: New Occy Just Dropped

Cloudbreak, Bells, and an ageless approach from the '99 World Champ.

May 22, 2025

Who’s Going To Win Stab High Japan Presented By Monster Energy?

Yago Dora, Luke Cederman, Coco Ho, Kaipo Guerrero, Curren Caples, Liam O’Brien, and more share…

May 22, 2025

Molly Picklum On Aisle Seat Warfare, Beating The Red-Eye + Not Melting Down In Transit

The Australian Queen of Sunset’s guide to travel, courtesy of Creatures.

May 21, 2025

We Got What We Asked For — Did The Box Deliver?

And why some CT women were pissed they didn't run.

May 21, 2025

Toby Cregan Drops Another Cult Classic — Rage 5

Five self-funded films in 10 years? That’s Quik-level execution on the Vonzipper budget.

May 21, 2025

Robbo, Italo, Yago, Filipe & Ethan Ewing Fall In Glorious West Australian Blood Bath

"Do we not watch pro surfing to live this vicariously?"

May 20, 2025

SEOTY: Keanu Miller Delivers His Carcass Unto Death Pits in ‘BLIP’

South Oz for Breakfast, Shippies for Dessert, ACL for Afterparty.

May 18, 2025

Margs Works Overtime On A Saturday, Clocks Out Just Before Mass Layoff Event

18 heats, exceptional surfing and an instantly-classic paddle battle within.

May 17, 2025

How To Eat, Surf, And Be Merry In Baja Sur (Mexico!)

As told by the Mexican marsupial, Baja Koala.

May 17, 2025

The Story Behind The New Stab High Air Section

Is the McFly the biggest wavepool air section ever?

May 16, 2025

The 61-Year-Old Night-Surfing Sasquatch Who Won’t Stop Chasing Oversized Swells And QS Glory 

Also, did this guy invent the ollie? Meet Tab Textor! 

May 16, 2025

What Will Our Stab High Judges Be Looking For?

"I will burn any double grab trick with great pleasure. This applies for all divisions."

May 15, 2025

Ex-Commish Kieren Perrow Explains Why The Box Hasn’t Run In 5 Years

A 2025 Margaret River Pro Preview.

May 15, 2025

Great White Shark Jay Davies Sniffs Out Margaret River Pro Winners

"Jack Robbo for the three-peat."

May 15, 2025

Who Lies Beneath Logan’s Last Guillotine?

A quasi-empirical breakdown of who needs what to dodge the mid-season axe.

May 14, 2025
Advertisement