
A hard-working street dance crew, get through to the national championship, but get shaken up when their leader and main choreographer, Jay, jumps ship 5 weeks before the competition. He tells the crew, and his girlfriend, Carly, that she has become is predecessor, adding that he needs a break from everything...and everyone, including Carly. Carly struggles to fit into the leadership role, encountering problems such as finding funding for a rehearsal space and gaining the res... (Full plot summary below)
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A hard-working street dance crew, get through to the national championship, but get shaken up when their leader and main choreographer, Jay, jumps ship 5 weeks before the competition. He tells the crew, and his girlfriend, Carly, that she has become is predecessor, adding that he needs a break from everything...and everyone, including Carly. Carly struggles to fit into the leadership role, encountering problems such as finding funding for a rehearsal space and gaining the respect and trust of the crew. Whilst delivering food to a performing arts school, Carly meets Choreographer and Musical Director, Helena. Helena, is having her own issues with her students, a group of talented ballet dancers, who are technically proficient, but show no passion or fire when they dance. Helena is warned by the chairman of the school that at their current standard, they will not pass their Royal Ballet auditions, and failure to do so will result in dismissals. Recognising this, Helena, who is known for her unconventional methods, proposes that Carly and her crew include her ballet dancers in the Street Dance competition, in return for using one of their dance studios. Out of options, Carly agrees and the two worlds collide...hard. A lot is riding on Carly and her new crew, including going up against the reigning champions 'The Surge', the ballet students passing their auditions for the Royal Ballet and Carly proving to herself, the crew, and to Jay, that she can lead them to victory. To achieve this, they have to learn to use and embrace both Ballet, Street Dance...and each other.
Leave your thoughts about StreetDance 3D.
| Times (UK)Kevin MaherLike a full-length version of Britain's Got Talent -- but in the best possible way. |
| Radio TimesAlan JonesThe classical/rap/hip-hop soundtrack is smoking and the 3-D visuals add immeasurably to the all-action routines |
| Daily Mail (UK)Christopher TookeyIt is a hackneyed girl-meets-boy story, adequately performed by Nichola Burley and Richard Winsor. The good news for the film-makers is that Streetdance's likely audience will be much less critical than I am. |
| ViewLondonMatthew TurnerDespite a painfully cliched script, dull dialogue and some distinctly dodgy performances, StreetDance 3D still scrapes a pass, thanks to terrific dance sequences and some extremely impressive 3D effects. |
| Daily Telegraph (UK)Tim RobeyThe choreographed routines and editing have such dizzy energy they carry it aloft. |
| Time OutDavid JenkinsThe movie has vim and spark in abundance and the filmmakers are canny enough to let the cast play to their strengths. |
| Sky CinemaTim EvansDon't dismiss it as a cheap Brit copy of Save The Last Dance -- this stands on its own two feet and more. |
| Total FilmEllen E JonesSkillfully pitched at its market, this is joyful in a way only the professionally grumpy (dads, film critics) could object to. |
| Daily Express (UK)Allan HunterAppearances from Britain's Got Talent stars Diversity, Flawless and George Sampson, along with some nimble routines, enhance the appeal of this energetic, unpretentious slice of teen entertainment. |
| New Zealand HeraldFrancesca Rudkin3D fatigue may mean the dancing doesn't look quite as striking as it did first time around, but if you're going to this film for its impressive moves you won't be disappointed. |