Street Dreams (2009): cast, story & where to watch
2009 · Film · ★ 6.2

Released in 2009, Street Dreams is an action, comedy, drama and adventure film directed by Chris Zamoscianyk, running about 88 minutes. “There are 10 million street skaters in the U.S. alone... This is their story.” — that tagline sets the tone.
What it’s about. Derrick Cabrera, like all skateboarders, dreams of being sponsored one day. He has all the talent in the world to make it happen but some major roadblocks to overcome before he can make the dream a reality.
Who’s in it. Street Dreams stars Paul Rodriguez as Derreck Cabrera, Ryan Dunn as Cash, Rob Dyrdek as Troy and Terry Kennedy as Reese, among others.
How it landed. With an audience score of 6.2/10, Street Dreams has drawn a solid, mixed-to-positive response. It went on to earn $122.6K at the box office.
Where to watch. In US you can stream it on Amazon Prime Video, fuboTV, Amazon Prime Video with Ads and Echoboom Amazon Channel and rent or buy it from Amazon Video, Apple TV Store, Google Play Movies and YouTube. See the full, country-by-country breakdown on our where to watch Street Dreams page.
If you liked it. Fans of Street Dreams tend to enjoy The Dark Knight, The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, Inception and The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring.
Frequently asked
- Where can I watch Street Dreams (2009)?
- In US, Street Dreams is available to stream on Amazon Prime Video, fuboTV and Amazon Prime Video with Ads, and rent or buy from Amazon Video, Apple TV Store and Google Play Movies. Availability varies by country — check our where-to-watch page for every region.
- Is Street Dreams worth watching?
- Street Dreams holds an audience score of 6.2 out of 10, and is a strong pick if you enjoy action, comedy, drama and adventure. Reactions are mixed, so it may depend on taste.
- Who stars in Street Dreams?
- Street Dreams stars Paul Rodriguez, Ryan Dunn, Rob Dyrdek, Terry Kennedy and Ryan Sheckler.
- When was Street Dreams released?
- Street Dreams was released in 2009, with a runtime of about 88 minutes.