FIND MOVIES
Movie List
Loading ...
or
Find Theaters and Movie Times
or
Search Movies

Review: Step Up Revolution

Abstractly beautiful
By PATRICK Z. MCGAVIN  |  July 26, 2012
2.5 2.5 Stars


The ne plus ultra of “guilty pleasures,” the Step Up movies are willfully naive, awkward, and irresistible. Directed by Scott Speer, the fourth iteration, Revolution, throbs with possibility as an underground collective called “the Mob” stages elaborate dance numbers in a bid to capture an American Idol-like Internet bounty. Expressively deploying the stereoscopic 3D imagery, Speer has the vertiginous choreography shifting into the abstractly beautiful, playing off the light and color at an art gallery or a Monet-influenced battery of corporate drones, to achieve a lyrical and kinetic propulsive flow. The inventive stylization and avant-garde flourishes counteract the actors’ technical limitations and the ludicrous framing story involving the collective’s leader (Ryan Guzman), his furtive romance with aspiring dancer Emily (Kathryn McCormick), and her father’s corporate hooliganism. At its best, it embodies emotion through movement.
  Topics: Reviews , Boston, corporate, things to do,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY PATRICK Z. MCGAVIN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REVIEW: STEP UP REVOLUTION  |  July 26, 2012
    The ne plus ultra of “guilty pleasures,” the Step Up movies are willfully naive, awkward, and irresistible.
  •   REVIEW: FAREWELL, MY QUEEN  |  July 24, 2012
    The gifted French director Benoît Jacquot specializes in movies about the emotions of young women.
  •   REVIEW: POLISSE  |  May 24, 2012
    The third feature by French actress and filmmaker Maïwenn, about the inner-workings of Paris's Child Protection Unit (CPU), is certainly kinetic, though also mannered and hyperbolic.
  •   REVIEW: GOODBYE FIRST LOVE  |  May 08, 2012
    The autobiographical third feature from French director Mia Hansen-Løve limns the ecstasy and tumult of youthful, sometimes self-destructive passion.
  •   REVIEW: IN DARKNESS  |  March 01, 2012
    Polish director Agnieszka Holland's Oscar-nominated story about a wastrel named Leopold Socha (Robert Wieckiewicz), who hid the Jews of Lvov from the Nazis by concealing them in the sewers, has an anguished and feral intensity.

 See all articles by: PATRICK Z. MCGAVIN