| Sperpetry | Дата: Воскресенье, 06.10.2013, 09:42 | Сообщение # 1 |
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| http://www.breakinconvention.com/sites/default/files/pictures/battle-of-the-year-2011-crews.jpg "Fight of the Year" touches on just how the remainder of the globe has actually welcomed b-boy society, yet just how they're not viewed as reducing side or cool in the United States. That stresses the Sean Combs-like impresario, Dante (Laz Alonso): "How long prior to hip-hop isn't really cool down?". He has to safeguard his music, fashion trend and dancing empire by placing American b-boys back ahead. He hires an old dance friend, W.B. (for "Wonder Bread"), now a grieving, alcoholic ex-basketball coach (Josh Holloway of "Lost"). W.B. has to get himself up to quicken on the existing state of dancing, after that recruit and coach a "desire team" of the finest of America's finest to tackle the remainder of the globe, which has passed America by and long dominated the annual b-boy Olympics referred to as "BOTY," the Battle of the Year. That group consists of diverse pretentious, chip-on-their-shoulder showoffs, since that's exactly what it takes to do well. Real superstar dancers such as Do Knock and Flipz are combined with others, featuring singer Chris Brown. And aiding coach is Jewish hip-hop authority "Franklyn with a y," played by Josh Peck. Benson Lee, supervisor of the clear-cut docudrama on the worldwide phenomenon, "Planet B-Boy," co-wrote and directed this, and immodestly has characters view that movie and sing its praises. Holloway can not even mean an actual dancing past, so the movie fabricates that by having his coach operate his men via drills (in split-screen series). Peck, as soon as of TV's "Drake & Josh," one-time superstar of "The Wackness," has a small, assisting task but is offered leading billing. In this case, that implies his every setting features coiffed and very fabricated close-ups. It's laughable. Tabloid beloved Brown additional compared to holds his own with this workers, evidently not also needing a dancing double. The dancing scenes-- particularly those including groups from Germany, France and Korea-- take the b-boy relocate to the upcoming level. And there are plenty of easy, undemanding laughs, the very best lines originating from Peck's assistant coach. "You appear like a gazelle out there," he praises his supervisor. "A gazelle with arthritis." Which, while it doesn't explain the motion picture, does hit this genre right in the bull's eye. Then, the charm of "Step Up" and all its tired imitators is that the viewers they're shooting for has no suggestion that there have actually been 20 or 30 motion pictures precisely like this one that came before it. He has to shield his popular music, dance and fashion empire by placing American b-boys back on leading. He employs an aged dance colleague, W.B. (for "Wonder Bread"), now a grieving, alcoholic ex-basketball coach (Josh Holloway of "Lost"). W.B. has to get himself up to quicken on the present state of dancing, then sponsor and coach a "desire group" of the finest of America's finest to take on the rest of the world, which has passed America by and long dominated the annual b-boy Olympics known as "BOTY," the Battle of the Year. here hip hop music http://hip2hop.com site
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