Un grupo de 12 adolescentes de diversos orígenes se inscriben en la American Ballet Academy de Nueva York para triunfar como bailarines y cada uno se enfrenta los problemas y el estrés de en... Leer todoUn grupo de 12 adolescentes de diversos orígenes se inscriben en la American Ballet Academy de Nueva York para triunfar como bailarines y cada uno se enfrenta los problemas y el estrés de entrenar y salir adelante en el mundo de la danza.Un grupo de 12 adolescentes de diversos orígenes se inscriben en la American Ballet Academy de Nueva York para triunfar como bailarines y cada uno se enfrenta los problemas y el estrés de entrenar y salir adelante en el mundo de la danza.
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado en total
- ABA Scout
- (as Jeffrey Hayenga)
- Eva
- (as Zoë Saldana)
- Erik
- (as Shakiem Evens)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
The dancing is what we are here for and it is flawless! From the salsa club scene to the modern dance class to the unbeatable finale. This dancing is on pointe!
The end dance which involves love triangles, motorcycles, canned heat and simulated sex is the reason to watch this movie. Dance movie finales do not get better than this.
If you love dance watch it, rewatch it and love it forever! Dance movies done right. This is best dance movie ever! Ever!
Amanda Schull plays Jody, a wannabe ballet dancer who gets accepted to the prestigious American Ballet Academy. The movie follows her life and that of her friends and fellow students, who fall into the predictable stereotypes. There's Eva (Zoe Saldana), the city kid with attitude. There's Maureen (Susan May Pratt), the teacher's pet. There's Erik (Shakiem Evans), the gay guy. There's Cooper (Ethan Stiefel), the bad-boy celebrity who's still in love with the director's wife ballerina. There's Charlie (Sascha Radetsky), the perfect good guy. One has the obnoxious stage mom. Another has the talent but not the drive. A third has the drive but not the talent. Etcetera. And the lives of the students take the typical high school romantic twists and turns, as the students compete for one of three spots in the company by the end of the year, and also in the various love triangles between the cast. There are few surprises here.
None of the cast is much of an actor - Schull is particularly uneven - and the plot has a sort of predictability to it that make eyes roll.
So why the 8/10? Well, because despite all this, Center Stage is a great amount of fun - mostly due to the dancing.
By casting real dancers in a lot of the roles, Center Stage lends an air of credibility to the lavishly filmed dance sequences, clearly done with love by such talents as world-leading dancers Julie Kent and Ethan Stiefel (widely considered to be one of the best ballet dancers in the world) as well as relatively new talents such as Amanda Schull. Some of the actors have body doubles dancing for them, such as Zoe Saldana - who had some dance training but not at the level required by the film. But overall, the dance scenes are the best part of the movie, especially Cooper's ballet at the end.
Some movies are great because they change your life or make you think. Center Stage is great because it's like candy - full of saccharine sugar and empty calories, but eminently watchable over and over again. Sometimes movies don't have to be socially relevant or intellectually stimulating to be good. Sometimes, escapism is OK too.
Two points seem worth mentioning.
The first is the matter of dance in film. Dance is intrinsically cinematic in terms of emotion as motion. But it is too personal, too directly a matter between humans, to convey well to the funnel of film: everything squashed into an image, then given indiscriminately and undifferentiatingly to all viewers. So the cinematographer has a tough choice: what to do with the camera to increase bodily intimacy.
One, unacceptable, extreme is to stay stationary at a few points, another is to choreograph the camera so the viewer is one of the dancers. In this case, at the end at least, we have a happy medium so far as camera involvement. The camera is stationary, but often within the field of dance, and it pans. The staging of the dance was partly to the audience pictured, and partly to us, which is very clever. But it would have been nice to be more adventurous in this regard, especially since there are several choreographers in NYC who are up to the challenge, and cheap!
The second point is a matter of self-reference, which I appreciate almost without qualification when I see it.
The filmmaker gives us a bunch of young actors (actually dancers) who surprise us by effectively showing us their souls in a little love triangle drama. And the matter of their story? A bunch of young dancers who surprise the audience in the film by effectively showing their souls in a little love triangle drama. The film as summarized in the dance is a very intelligent device which I appreciated. And you will too.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaSusan May Pratt, who plays the best dancer in the school, Maureen Cummings, had no ballet training before being cast.
- ErroresThe audience that watch the students' performance at the end of the movie is exactly the same as when the students go to watch the ballet at the beginning of the movie.
- Citas
Maureen Cummings: If this is what I wanted, I wouldn't be as unhappy as I've been. I'd have friends, I'd sleep well, I wouldn't throw up half the things that I eat.
Nancy Cummings: You watch your weight. There's nothing wrong with that!
Maureen Cummings: Mom, I'm telling you I'm unhappy and sick. I can't do this any more!
Nancy Cummings: But it's your dream. You just don't give up on your dream.
Maureen Cummings: It's your dream, and it matters more to you than anything ever did to me. So I did it, but I can't any more.
Nancy Cummings: I know what regret feels like, and I don't want that for you.
Maureen Cummings: That's what ballet would be. A life of wishing that I found something I loved, instead of something I just happened to do well. I'm not you, Mom. You didn't have the feet. I don't have the heart.
- Bandas sonorasAdagio for a Ballet Class
Written and Performed by Dmitry Polischuk
Selecciones populares
- How long is Center Stage?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Center Stage
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 29,000,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 17,200,925
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 4,604,621
- 14 may 2000
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 26,385,941
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 55 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1