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Center Stage (Special Edition)
Director: Nicholas Hytner
Actors: Amanda Schull, Ethan Stiefel, Sascha Radetsky, Christine Dunham, Stephen Stout
Rated: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Retail Price (not our price): $14.99
Release Date: 2000-10-24
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Run Time: 115 minutes
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Discs: 1

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Editorial Reviews (supplied by Amazon.com):

1) Product Description
Amanda Schull, Zoe Saldana. Young ballet dancers compete for the chance to realize their dreams in this stirring drama. 2000/color/114 min/PG-13.

2) Amazon.com
The primary appeal of dance movies is the dancing, with some added emphasis on the romance the art expresses. Center Stage wins on these counts, despite its reveling in overly familiar characters and formula plotting. Or maybe this reveling is responsible for what goofy fun this film is. The arduous task of becoming a professional ballet dancer is incarnated by many good-looking teens, all stock dance-film characters affectionately portrayed mostly by newcomers. But center stage holds Jody Sawyer (Amanda Schull), who may never be a great ballerina, but she's certainly one sexy jazz dancer. Then there's the arrogant genius (Ethan Stiefel), the dictatorial impresario (Peter Gallagher), the demanding instructor, the bulimic, the stage mother, etc. As we follow these characters, the message develops that one should let go and do what feels good. Jody may not be ballet material, but she scorches the stage when she's uninhibited. And that's really the fun of this movie, which is never seriously interested in ballet to begin with. One ludicrous scene depicts one of the dancers quitting because she realizes she never wanted to be a dancer to begin with but was pushed into it by her overbearing mother. She stands up to mom in the lobby of the auditorium where she's supposed to be performing, the music of her piece providing a syrupy backdrop to her little drama. When she's finished talking, she walks off to the audience's unwitting applause. The scene is so ham-handed you can't help but laugh at its audacity, if that's what it is. The rest of the film is not so overdone, but it's all fun. --Jim Gay


Customer Reviews (supplied by Amazon.com):
Average Customer Rating: out of 5

 
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