IMDb RATING
5.9/10
7.7K
YOUR RATING
A struggling young jazz dancer meets up with two break-dancers. Together they become the sensation of the street crowds.A struggling young jazz dancer meets up with two break-dancers. Together they become the sensation of the street crowds.A struggling young jazz dancer meets up with two break-dancers. Together they become the sensation of the street crowds.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
Adolfo Quinones
- Ozone
- (as Adolfo 'Shabba-Doo' Quinones)
Michael Chambers
- Turbo
- (as Michael 'Boogaloo Shrimp' Chambers)
Bruno Falcon
- Electro Rock 1
- (as Bruno 'Pop N' Taco' Falcon)
Popin Pete
- Electro Rock 2
- (as Timothy 'Poppin' Pete' Solomon)
Ana Sánchez
- Electro Rock 3
- (as Ana 'Lollipop' Sanchez)
Ice-T
- Rap Talker
- (as Ice T)
Teresa Kelly
- Vicky
- (as T.C. Laughlin)
Ric Mancino
- Joe the Cook
- (as Ric Mancini)
Featured reviews
The plot is simple, the acting is spare, but the dancing, which is the whole reason for the show, is exceptional and still fresh after 20 years. If you love dancing, give a view. If you love dancing, it won't disappoint you.
A true b-movie classic... pop and lock it, baby. Everything about this movie is funny watching it today. The wardrobes are awesome. They're so bad that they're good. The acting is so stilted and straight that you can't help but dig it, and the storyline is very predictable, but somehow does the job, and gets you to remain interested in the story in a 80's kind of way. This whole film is almost camp now. But the Break dancing is off the chain... Breaking 2 - Electric Boogaloo is even better! I'm surprised movies used to be this simple? Amazing how times and movies change, seems like usually for the better if you're looking at it from a modern sensibility. It's dated, but totally cool and fun to watch with friends...
Breakin' is one of the movies that put hip-hop on the map. It turned disco into a new form of enjoyment. During the early 80s disco faded and from 1981 thru 1983 music groups introduced funk and techno type beats. At that time there was no specific dance to these songs. But I guess a couple of guys from the Bronx created a new dance that interested thousands of people in the metropolitan area. There was graffiti in the subway that displayed a urban form of art. The big boom boxes (large am/fm cassette radios) that young guys carry along the street. This was all hip-hop. The movie just inspired urban youth to do something creative with their talent. Though sadly it quickly sudsided by the beginning of 85'.
Back in 1984, hip hop as a social phenomenon didn't exist. Hip hop was still the "trendy" music from New York City that somehow was gaining the attention of Hollywood. For some, it was great, for others it was the beginning of something that has yet to be recaptured, the innocence of a new and fresh musical artform, and a culture.
Nonetheless, "Breakin'" is a film that takes place in California where Kelly (Lucinda Dickey) is hoping to make it with her dancing. He goes to the beach and catches a dance routine with a few breakdancers, Turbo and Ozone. She loves it, and eventually becomes their friend. One of them finds her attractive, the other chooses to pop his way through life. Kelly's family doesn't want her to be hanging around with the "hoodlums", but Turbo and Ozone simply want to hang out and have fun. Kelly finds herself learning the street-style of dance, and treats it as a serious artform rather than a bunch of guys dancing on cardboard for the hell of it. Looking back, it seems very much like a Hollywood version of what can really happen when two cultures clash (shades of "West Side Story"), but the film has good music, good dancing, a decent story, and it looks back at a time when hip hop as a whole was trying its hardest to gain respect.
Five extra points for Lucinda Dickey, who was easily one of the more beautiful actresses of the 80's.
Nonetheless, "Breakin'" is a film that takes place in California where Kelly (Lucinda Dickey) is hoping to make it with her dancing. He goes to the beach and catches a dance routine with a few breakdancers, Turbo and Ozone. She loves it, and eventually becomes their friend. One of them finds her attractive, the other chooses to pop his way through life. Kelly's family doesn't want her to be hanging around with the "hoodlums", but Turbo and Ozone simply want to hang out and have fun. Kelly finds herself learning the street-style of dance, and treats it as a serious artform rather than a bunch of guys dancing on cardboard for the hell of it. Looking back, it seems very much like a Hollywood version of what can really happen when two cultures clash (shades of "West Side Story"), but the film has good music, good dancing, a decent story, and it looks back at a time when hip hop as a whole was trying its hardest to gain respect.
Five extra points for Lucinda Dickey, who was easily one of the more beautiful actresses of the 80's.
I grew up in a town of 500 people. That is important to keep in mind while I tell this story. A town of 500 people in rural Illinois. No black people. When I was in junior high, my next door neighbors went through a serious breakdancing phase, and they recruited me to be on their gang? Team? Troupe? (what do you call a group of breakdancers? Let's go with "gang" because that sounds coolest) even though I couldn't break dance. I could do exactly one move -- that worm thing where you lay on your stomach and kind of flop your body forwards from feet to head like a centipede having a full body convulsion. Except I couldn't go forwards, only backwards. We called ourselves the Pop Lockers, without a hint of irony. We made matching t-shirts by painting on white undershirts, and even tried to recreate the look of urban graffiti as only a bunch of white rural kids who've never even seen a black person can.
Even in a town of only 500 people, we managed to find a rival break dance gang (maybe the Sharks? Though I might just be confusing my memories of childhood with "West Side Story"). We were always threatening to have a break dance rumble, but it never materialized.
I didn't see "Breakin'" when I was a kid. I only just now saw it for the first time on TCM. But in retrospect I'm guessing my neighbors did, and another piece of that whole puzzle has now fallen into place.
This is not the kind of movie you review. This is the kind of movie you watch if you want to enjoy a corny, pretty bad movie, or you don't watch if you don't. My rating of it is based on how entertained I was during it, not how good a movie I thought it was.
This is also the kind of movie you watch if you want to get a brief glimpse of Jean Claude Van Damme (yes, that Jean Claude Van Damme) dancing in the background of one scene while wearing a black unitard. And let's be honest, who doesn't want to see that?
Grade: B.
Even in a town of only 500 people, we managed to find a rival break dance gang (maybe the Sharks? Though I might just be confusing my memories of childhood with "West Side Story"). We were always threatening to have a break dance rumble, but it never materialized.
I didn't see "Breakin'" when I was a kid. I only just now saw it for the first time on TCM. But in retrospect I'm guessing my neighbors did, and another piece of that whole puzzle has now fallen into place.
This is not the kind of movie you review. This is the kind of movie you watch if you want to enjoy a corny, pretty bad movie, or you don't watch if you don't. My rating of it is based on how entertained I was during it, not how good a movie I thought it was.
This is also the kind of movie you watch if you want to get a brief glimpse of Jean Claude Van Damme (yes, that Jean Claude Van Damme) dancing in the background of one scene while wearing a black unitard. And let's be honest, who doesn't want to see that?
Grade: B.
Did you know
- TriviaIn the first "street dancing" scene, in which Kelly accompanies Ozone and Turbo to the beach, the audience watching the dancing is comprised of surfers and beach bums. A man in a black singlet claps with the music. It's Jean-Claude Van Damme in his first on-screen appearance. According to Van Damme, he tried hard to draw attention to himself by jumping in the air and doing flips, but they were not included in the film.
- GoofsIn the second dance battle scene in the club, Ice-T can clearly be seen rapping/talking into the microphone in the background yet we do not hear him at all. All that can be heard is music and the main characters dialog.
- ConnectionsFeatured in At the Movies: Breakin'/Firestarter/Hardbodies/Sugar Cane Alley (1984)
- SoundtracksTibetan Jam
Written by Chris The Glove Taylor (as Chris "The Glove" Taylor)
Rap by Ice-T (as Ice T)
Produced by Chris The Glove Taylor (as Chris "The Glove" Taylor)
- How long is Breakin'?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Breakdance: la película
- Filming locations
- 4323 Melrose Avenue, Los Angeles, California, USA(Interior and exterior. Boogaloo shrimp's broom dance sequence in front of convenience store.)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $38,682,707
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $6,047,686
- May 6, 1984
- Gross worldwide
- $38,682,707
- Runtime
- 1h 27m(87 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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