
Beaten by his rival Invincible's hip-hop crew and ridiculed as 'Popcorn boy', Ash seeks revenge at the annual international street dance championship in Paris. He travels trough Europe to gather an exceptionally talented crew. In Paris, he meets in her overprotective uncle-guardian Manu's bar and wants Latin dancer Eva. They agree to attempt a fusion with hip-hop, introducing Latin pair dancing, and become lovers. A week before the tournament, Ash gets cold feet, all seems lo... (Full plot summary below)
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Beaten by his rival Invincible's hip-hop crew and ridiculed as 'Popcorn boy', Ash seeks revenge at the annual international street dance championship in Paris. He travels trough Europe to gather an exceptionally talented crew. In Paris, he meets in her overprotective uncle-guardian Manu's bar and wants Latin dancer Eva. They agree to attempt a fusion with hip-hop, introducing Latin pair dancing, and become lovers. A week before the tournament, Ash gets cold feet, all seems lost.
Leave your thoughts about StreetDance 2.
| Radio TimesAlan JonesIn this worthy successor, it's once again the dancing that counts, and this sure-fire crowd-pleaser delivers sensational high-energy routines to some great pop hits. |
| Movie TalkJason BestThe story is even flimsier than before, but the dancing is even more electrifying... The vibrant choreography fuses hip-hop hustle and Latin sensuality and the climactic dance number is so cool it raises goosebumps. |
| Time OutAnna SmithBoutella shows promise beyond her day job as one of Madonna's dancers but otherwise speaking parts are sensibly limited to those who can act. |
| Sky CinemaTim EvansAlthough essentially a series of genuinely impressive dance set pieces linked by no more than adequate dramatic interludes, this scores thanks to its sly acknowledgment that street dance can take itself a little too seriously. |
| Daily Telegraph (UK)Robbie CollinA new emphasis on Latin dance means the choreography is often stomach-flutteringly seductive, but it's hard not to regret the loss of the first film's uniquely British flavour. |
| GuardianPeter BradshawStreetdance 2 has brash energy; it does not neglect to do what it says on the tin and the lack of realism is no problem. |
| Toronto StarBruce DeMaraIf you're hoping for intricate plotting, suspense or even nominal character development, StreetDance 2 is unlikely to waltz away with your heart. |
| What CultureShaun MunroLike almost all dance films, Streetdance 2 has failed to find extremely talented dancers who are also even remotely credible actors. |
| Total FilmNeil Smith"What are you going to do?" wails Maggie. "What I do best!" growls Liam. Yet while it's fun to watch him take out the Eurotrash, we've seen him do it better. |
| Empire MagazineHelen O'HaraShoddy 3D and flashy editing distract from the admittedly great dancing, but little else offers a particular reason to watch it. |