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Home Culture

Dancing with no plot

byCNS
26 September 2014
Reading Time: 2 mins read
AA
'Step Up All In'

Dance mates: Ryan Guzman, Briana Evigan, Parris Gobel and Christopher Scott (front) star in a scene from the movie Step Up All In. Photo: CNS/Summit

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'Step Up All In'
Dance mates: Ryan Guzman, Briana Evigan, Parris Gobel and Christopher Scott (front) star in a scene from the movie Step Up All In.
Photo: CNS/Summit

STEP UP ALL IN: Starring Ryan Guzman, Adam G. Sevani, Briana Evigan, Alyson Stoner, Misha Gabriel Hamilton. Directed by Trish Sie. 112 minutes. Rated PG (Mild coarse language)

Reviewed by Kurt Jensen

COMPLETISTS of the Step Up franchise may find the fifth outing in the dance-showcasing series, “Step Up All In, enjoyable. Others will wonder where the plot went.

Intricate storylines have never been the goal in these films, in which scrappy, multi-ethnic dance crews seek an escape from their workaday existences by entering lucrative competitions.

The series is a happy fantasy with a relentlessly positive – and basically moral – milieu. It’s all about the kids showing off their moves.

“There’s a magic that happens when you dance,” Sean Asa (Ryan Guzman) says in the opening voice-over. “The world is in synch, and for one perfect moment, you feel totally alive.”

So we get it – Gotta dance. But director Trish Sie and screenwriter John Swetnam come up hugely short on dialogue to stitch the terpsichorean segments together. And what there is of conversation is stoutly cliched.

As the movie begins, Sean and his team, reduced to auditioning for commercials, have washed out all their prospects in Los Angeles. So Sean’s fellow dancers abandon him, returning to their hometown, Miami.

More or less undaunted, Sean finds a new dream online with The Vortex, a reality-TV competition in Las Vegas hosted by Alexxa Brava (Izabella Miko). The winners of The Vortex will be rewarded with a guaranteed three-year contract at a Sin City hotel.

Within no more time than it takes to call out “five-six-seven-eight”, Sean reunites with friends Moose (Adam Sevani) and Andie (Briana Evigan). Together, they assemble a new crew that features spectacular choreography, chic costumes – and the occasional mild argument.

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There’s pluck, there’s moxie, there’s the old know-how, and sometimes someone blows out a knee or loses their nerve. But where there’s a tapping toe, it seems, there’s always a way.

Mature adolescents should have no problem with any of this, other than feeling deprived by the skimpy script. The film contains fleeting sexual banter and at least one instance of rough language. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.

Kurt Jensen is a guest reviewer for Catholic News Service.

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