

Step Up Revolution employes flash mobs, ballet, special effects, fine art, performance art, street art, and even parkour. Step Up Revolution leaps to an entirely new stratosphere it’s more than just a mixture of urban and classical dance. The miracle about these Step Up films is that, though neither the storylines nor the acting has improved (in fact, they have devolved considerably since Charming Potato and his wife, Jenna Dewan-Tatum, who seem positively Shakespearean in comparison to the actors in the subsequent installments), the dance sequences have only gotten better. It’s all very foreign to me, and watching the dance sequences, I often feel like a four-year-old watching his first cartoon: Wide-eyed, mesmerized, and blown away.
Step up revolution all in movie#
Point being: My exposure to dance and other performance arts is largely limited to movie screens and these urban dance flicks like Step Up. I spend most of my time writing about movies and television, or watching movies and television, and if it’s possible, I’m even more uncool than when the last Step Up movie came out. I’ll preface this review the same way I’ve prefaced them since Charming Potato danced his way to stardom in the original Step Up: I’m a lame white guy from Arkansas who now lives in Portland, and not even the cool Portland.
