
#Step up 2 the streets final dance song movie#
too bad they could afford the choreographer, but skimped out on the good actors, I know I shouldn't have watched this film, I didn't like the first Step Up movie, what in the world possessed me to watch the sequel? My friends and I were bored and needed a movie to watch and since a couple of my girlfriends are just die hard fans of the first Step Up, they were dying to see the sequel. So I am going to state that Step Up 2 the Streets is strictly meant for street dance fans, otherwise this makes the first movie look like a class act of its own. Not very effective, or interesting to sit through unfortunately. Even so, instead of one coherent act, you get many disjointed short sequences being force fit together. Coming together for the expected finale was also very staged and forced, and in no way given the story development, can they pull off something like that. Here, it's more improvisation, and even then, you can't help but notice the very individualistic styles that stand out on its own, never for a minute trying to blend in with the rest of the crew. What made the first interesting to watch, is the fusion of two different schools of thought, and having them come together for an explosive finale which was worth the wait. However, in my own personal un-dance-like opinion, the dancing here pales in comparison to the first.

And there are plenty of set pieces for one to gawk at.
#Step up 2 the streets final dance song free#
I'd bet everyone in the audience, who are mostly teenagers into free form dance, will lap up all the moves that the cast put on display. But all that camaraderie building aside, which is what is formulaic glue, the main draw is undoubtedly the street dancing moves. Too many characters here and all of them turn out to be one- dimensional and cardboard. Sure, you have the outcast who don't look right and get prejudiced against, a typical younger brother trying to step out of the shadows of his more illustrious brother who's now school principal, and some might even deem it condescending to have an Asian character who speaks in a funny accent.

Whatever troubles these teens have, it's all secondary to the purpose of making the movie. From what we've seen in the first, those snobby arty farty dance kids no longer hog the spotlight, as it is firmly on a group of misfits who are here to replace the loss of the previous two leads Jenna Dewan and Channing Tatum, although the latter did land a guest appearance to cement the excuse for a sequel, as well as to pass on the troubled teen mantle to Andie (Briana Evigan). But Step Up 2 retains much of the superficial facade of the original movie, with the setting in the same elite school, only with a different cohort. From the get go, it seemed like a unique idea, until you realize it's all staged to gain street cred in this Youtube age, performed by "crew" members of reigning street dance champions 410. The opening just might inspire the return of the flashmobbers, a fad which picked up for a short time in Singapore (of which I did participate in one), and then faded into oblivion. Okay, I will be honest, there wasn't much story I was paying the fullest attention to, it was all the dancing, including in a club with trampolines, and the brilliant choreographed routines that are to watch closely, so for that, a good romantic dance drama. Also starring Sonja Sohn as Sarah, Danielle Polanco as Missy, Telisha Shaw as Felicia, Black Thomas as Tuck, Channing Tatum as Tyler and Christopher Scott as Hair. Sevani) gets a kiss from Sophie (Cassie Ventura), and Andie gets with Chase. Being involved in illegal competitions at The Streets, Andie is expelled from the school, but by the end she has her education secured with a great performance, her friend Moose (Adam G. Andie is allowed into Maryland School of the Arts (MSA), with Chase Collins (Robert Hoffman) persuading Blake Collins (Will Kemp) to recruit her.

Basically in Baltimore, Maryland, Andie West (Briana Evigan) wants to be a big street dancing star being a member of the 410 crew, and they without permission or illegally use school premises to do their stuff. The first film was a good excuse for great choreographed street dancing, the story is obviously not as relevant, but the good news is there came this sequel with more great moves, possibly better ones.
