Save the Last Dance



To be more specific, the film continually breaks away from the more lively part of its story as if to say that the dance story line isn't important enough to merit a film of its own. But it's actually the socially conscious elements that don't work here.
Not that this muddled drama's statements about racial tolerance mostly involving interracial relationships isn't a welcome one. However, it's done in such a heavy-handed, even contrived, manner that it manages to drag down the whole film.
Add to that Thomas Carter's rather uninspired direction and some extremely inconsistent characterizations, and what could have been a decent movie quickly turns into just another mediocre one.
That said, what really stands out here, besides the lively dance routines, is the cast. Julia Stiles stars as Sara Johnson, a Chicago high school student who was once a promising ballerina but now has turned her back on dance after the death of her mother. She's also had to leave her comfortable home in exchange for a somewhat cozier apartment on the south side with her jazz musician father (an underused Terry Kinney).
Chenille also introduces Sara to her brother, star student Derek (Sean Patrick Thomas, from TV's "The District"), and despite their very different backgrounds, they hit it off.
But there are a few things standing in the way of their romance, primarily her guilt about her past, as well as his somewhat shady connections to a dangerous fellow student (actor/rapper Fredro Starr).
Again, the film probably would have been better off had the filmmakers decided to play it out as a sort of urban "Dirty Dancing," rather than a contemporary "Romeo and Juliet." The script (by a pair of newcomers) isn't nearly as lively or as subtle as it needs to be, and the preachy dialogue makes every scene seem twice as long as it needs to be.
However, the cast members do their best to salvage as much of the movie as they can. As an actress, Stiles can come off as somewhat patrician and there's a slight smugness to her performance, but she's got more chemistry with Thomas than you might expect.
Speaking of Thomas, he and relative newcomer Washington are the real stars, giving performances that are probably better than the material deserves.
"Save the Last Dance" is rated PG-13 for occasional profanity, violence (gunplay and a couple of scuffles), lewd dancing, use of crude gestures and slang, as well as some racial epithets, and a brief, discreet sex scene. Running time: 110 minutes
E-MAIL: jeff@desnews.com
Find a Movie Theater
Yes, but if those "feel good lyrics" can reach millions of people, then some good …
You're right, the last 8 years would never be considered "screwed up" would they! …
I dont think its the Y fans who are being so critical.
The age-old pesky U.S.-Mexico border problem has taxed the resources of both countries, …
Anybody -- he'd better enjoy his big salary for one more year, because his career …
Franken will be in GREAT company in Washington D.C. We can now move the Saturday …
The problem becomes having a military taking over without a political process. …
@To Nate 2:18 p.m. From 1998 to 2008 University of Alabama, Huntsville (UAH) data …
We have, in modern times, had secularists that grabed the reins of power. How did …



High school basketball: Collinsworth is state's top recruit
re: BYBlue said:
I guess I should give you a break that you (presumably) didn't know what Gary Wilkinson, …