
Angel is a dancer wishing to adopt a child. Stormy is a dancer with a secret with her brother Sully. Jasmine is a poetess who falls in love with Dennis. Jo is a dancer who became pregnant and Jessie is a woman fighting to survive in Hollywood. The link between them is the fact that they dance at Blue Iguana, a strip-club managed by Eddie. Their personal dramas are the theme of this movie.... (Full plot summary below)
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Angel is a dancer wishing to adopt a child. Stormy is a dancer with a secret with her brother Sully. Jasmine is a poetess who falls in love with Dennis. Jo is a dancer who became pregnant and Jessie is a woman fighting to survive in Hollywood. The link between them is the fact that they dance at Blue Iguana, a strip-club managed by Eddie. Their personal dramas are the theme of this movie.
Leave your thoughts about Dancing at the Blue Iguana.
| Ozus' World Movie ReviewsDennis SchwartzThere's a lot of tepid exotic dancing as the girls' writhe and slither around the pole. |
| New York PostLou LumenickYou'd be better off renting Demi Moore's "Striptease." |
| Los Angeles TimesKevin ThomasA well-crafted film, and it must be said that its actresses, in being prepared to come close to baring all for art, reveal stunning figures and perform scorching routines. |
| CitysearchBilge EbiriThe result is a very believable strip club, inhabited by cardboard-thin protagonists who come across as caricatures more than actual people. |
| TheMovieReport.comMichael DequinaAlways a more interesting acting exercise than compelling drama. |
| The New York TimesStephen HoldenAn ensemble piece developed from an improvisational workshop, the movie exudes a haunted melancholy that recalls such early Alan Rudolph films as "Choose Me" and "Welcome to L.A," and it includes several flashy performances. |
| New Times (L.A.)Luke Y. ThompsonAll the ladies get repeatedly naked, which, after all, is why you're going to go see it. And there's nothing wrong with that. |
| L.A. WeeklyJohn PattersonIguana runs hot and cold, being engaging and dull by turns depending on the plausibility of the character before the camera. |
| TV GuideMaitland McDonaghContains striking moments, but never coheres. |
| Filmcritic.comChristopher NullAfter a full hour of Iguana I was watching the DVD counter tick by in slow motion. |