Step Up (2010)

6.1/10
45/100
46% – Critics
64% – Audience

Step Up Storyline

After graduating high school from the Maryland School of the Arts (MSA), Moose, with his longtime BFF and fellow MSA alumnus Camille, decides to “grow up” by quitting dance and becoming an engineering student at NYU, much to the delight of his parents. An impromptu street dance battle in New York City in which Moose is involved against Kid Darkness of the renowned House of Samurai dance crew catches the eye of Luke, the leader of the House of Pirates dance crew. Luke convinces Moose to join his crew, which is comprised of a group of misfits who each has his/her own individual dance style. Luke and his crew live in what is called the vault – a converted warehouse – which has a living and dance rehearsal space upstairs and a dance club downstairs. Luke has his own personal reasons for creating the vault and helping these dancers. However, he is five months behind in the mortgage payments and the bank could foreclose at any second. Luke believes winning the $100,000 grand prize in the inaugural World Jam Championships would solve his financial problems. The Samurais, led by Luke’s nemesis Julien, are their main competition. Beyond the prestige, Julien has his own motive for wanting to win and ruin the Pirates. Luke is also trying to recruit Natalie, a recent attendee to the downstairs club. In getting to know Luke, Natalie tries to get him to follow his own dreams. But Natalie’s involvement with the Pirates may threaten its existence. Meanwhile, Moose is trying to balance his secret involvement with the Pirates against his commitments to school and to Camille, who secretly wants to be more than just a platonic BFF to Moose. But Camille may be able to take only so much neglect from Moose before even their BFF status is placed into jeopardy.

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Step Up Movie Reviews

In your face

I still believe that Streetdance has a stronger core (story) and is just slightly better in the acting department. But when it comes down to the dancing and the 3-D effects of those dance scenes … well the winner has to be Step up!

Of course dance movies have divided audiences left and right for awhile. Some finding them ridiculous (and being right, when it comes to the slim stories on offer), others can’t get enough of them. I guess the movies kinda make you want to move your feet. And this one is no exception (if you like dancing that is). You just have to decide what group you belong too. If you are waiting for a dance movie, with a very strong story … you will still have to wait though

Step Up 3D

The first film was really only good for the dancing, the second film was an improvement, but still all about the dancing, and this third film had the added 3D element, but is still all about the dancing. Basically Moose (Adam G. Sevani), who is majoring in electrical engineering and has promised his father he won’t dance anymore, and Camille (Alyson Stoner), also a dancer, are attending New York University. Moose makes a new friend in fellow dancer and member of the “House of Pirates”, Luke (Rick Malambri), after spotting his pair Limited Edition Gun Metal Nike Dunks, and of course they share an interest in street dancing. In amongst everything there is a rivalry between the two dance gangs, the Pirates and the “House of Samurai”, and Luke, with skilled and in between gang dancer Natalie (Sharni Vinson), and the friends he has made making his documentary showing people’s passion for dancing, they plan to beat them. There is a big street dance competition to win the title as World Jam champions and the $10,000 prize for the best routine, and of course they win and all differences are forgotten about. Also starring Keith Stallworth as Jacob, Kendra Andrews as Anala, Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss as Jason, Martín and Facundo Lombard as The Santiago Twins, Oren ‘Flearock’ Michaeli as Carlos, Joe Slaughter as Julien, Daniel ‘Cloud’ Campos as Kid Darkness and Kathy Najimy as Moose’s Mom. Firstly, it has a really good soundtrack, with Jay-Z feat. Alicia Keys’ “Empire State of Mind”, and the song that beat The Saturdays’ “Higher to number one, Flo Rida feat. David Guetta’s “Club Can’t Handle Me”. The predictable story is of course not as interesting as seeing the wonderful and exciting choreography and brilliant dance routines, and with lasers, flashy (literally) get-ups, bubbles and floating slush puppies, and if you’re lucky enough to see it in 3D you get a little bit more of a buzz, for the dancing, a worthwhile romantic dance drama. Good!

usually it’s just very funny, though not in the ways intended, and other times, there’s good dancing, GREAT 3D

It’s been a while of slogging through the past year of 3D after 3D movie coming out, and most of them are not rushing out to see, since the movies themselves aren’t worth the trouble (and some, like Last Airbender, threaten to derail the old-new technology that is raking in the bucks). But sometimes one should see a 3D movie if it merits it, or looks to be like the gimmick of it will make it worthwhile- yes, gimmick, it really still is even with the merits with Avatar and Toy Story 3 in the format- and Step Up 3D is one of those movies.

This isn’t a review where I can talk about the film in terms of its ‘canon’ placement in the series, in large part since this is the first Step Up movie I’ve seen. Then again the films are only somewhat connected through a couple of the characters (Moose and Camille, from Step Up 2 the Streets and Step Up respectively), and it can be watched pretty much on its own terms. And who comes to these movies for the plot?

The story is the most clichéd thing about it: a guy has his own kind of, uh, ‘family’ of dancers called The Pirates who dance the pants off anyone they come across, except maybe the Samurai, who will face off against them. But does the guy, closet filmmaker Luke, know that the girl he’s falling for is really the sister of the nefarious douche who runs the Samurai dancers? Oh no, what will happen, especially considering all of the dancers are counting on this final 100 grand payment at the competition to save the loft?

Indeed the story was not the reason I went out to see this, and aside from some laughter at some of the plot twists and almost ALL of the performances (they range from competent to laughably WTF, like pulling out the rejects from Electric Boogaloo from the Hot Tub Time Machin), but how nuts the dancing could get. To be fair, who really follows who these cast members are? One is more well-versed in the work of the composer, Bear McCreary, oddly enough of Battlestar Galactica fame.

Believe it or not, this isn’t really all technically *dancing*. It’s crazy choreography, and there should be a difference distinguished between the two. When a dance number turns into a demo reel for TRON 3D, it isn’t dancing really, not the kind that can be enjoyed like from the old days of dancing musicals. After a while it just turns into a lot of manic movements, often like robotic dancing (Domo Arrigato) and other weird things. At one point a dance group keeps wooshing black smoke, which of course is just right (and wrong) for 3D.

But there are some moments when one can stop laughing or just being entertained at the ludicrous ‘bustin’ of moves and how some of it turns into ‘Beat It’ (like the music video, such as a ‘dancing fight’ in a bathroom where the Samurai crew gang up on Moose in the bathroom), or some moments when one can stop laughing at the character turns (hey, if a character can have a double major in Engineering and Dancing at NYU, why can’t another go to film school in NYC, supposedly in this world there are only film schools in California and they accept based on crappy document, oh nevermind), and it is genuinely fun. It is mostly harmless, and not offensive to certain sensibilities of intelligence like High School Musical movies. It’s a goofy movie for young people that does feature a couple of genuinely amazing moments; when Moose and Camille stop at an ice cream truck and have a song turned up loud and do a *real* dance number on the street, it turns for a moment into the bright whimsy of a Gene Kelly number.

Those moments aren’t many, and often the movie just goes from one stupid scene to another. But if one can leave intellectual high standards at the door and take in a movie that is just silly 80’s-dance-movie inspired fun, then it’s a good time. And the 3D makes things pop and groove in the dance numbers, and somehow works for the benefit of the material.