Center
Stage Movie Review:
Center
Stage is a dance film that serves its purpose. The film
follows the hopes and dreams of a group of young dance students
as they try to make a name for themselves and become stars
in the fiercely competitive world of professional dance.
Vibrant and supremely gifted, they are students who devote
themselves to their talent, sacrificing ordinary pleasures
of life to train with the rigor of Olympic athletes. While
experiencing the normal joys and sorrows, loves and conflicts
of youth, they live for a place in a selective professional
dance company.
Center
Stage is a dance movie that will please its targeted audience,
which are teenagers. I didn't really care for the film too
much, but I know that it will entertain most audiences.
It reminded me of a mix between Fame and Riverdance.
Carol
Heikkinen wrote the script for Center Stage. The script
isn't sharp, but the writer gets her point across. The characters
are established, but most of the sequencing is predictable
and vague. The one aspect that I really liked in Heikkinen's
script is how strict and mean the director of the dance
school is. Artistic directors are exactly like the way Heikkinen
portrays them. From my own experience in some theater and
the stories I have heard from my young cousin, who is an
up and coming ballet dancer, Heikkinen's creation is a accurate
depiction. I believe that the directors' attitudes and reactions
to their dancers are what make this film watchable.
Peter
Gallagher turns in a slimy performance as the dance school's
head director. The rest of the cast is mostly inexperienced
actors. Zoe Saldena's performance is the only effective
one in the film as the hot-tempered dancer Eva. Even though
they don't pull off good acting, I tip my hat to the cast's
respectable dancing abilities. Famous world dancers Ethan
Stiefel and Sascha Ra Detsky star as the two lead male characters.
Outside of Riverdance, I have never seen guys move and dance
so swiftly as these two.
Like
I said before, I like the strict director aspects in the
film and the admirable dancing, but not much else. The film
lacks the teamwork side of making a dance show achievable,
this film is more about each character's quest to excellence.
However, watch for Center Stage to be a sleeper hit with
teenagers this summer.
Report
Card Grade: C
Joseph
Tucker
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