Original working title: Shut Up and Dance. Given the already minimal nature of the
plot and dialogue in this low-budget dance-and-romance trifle, the filmmakers might
have done well to heed that titular advice and just scrap everything but the high-voltage
dance sequences that are its sole rationale. Now granted, perfunctory storytelling
is an accepted feature of the dance-movie tradition. Anybody remember any of the
subplots or characters' names from An American in Paris? But even by the humbler
standards of Flashdance and Dirty Dancing, the plotting and character development
of Dance With Me are egregiously thin. In essence, all that really goes on here is
that a good-looking young Cuban guy (Puerto Rican singing star Chayanne) comes to
Houston to work for a man who may or may not be his father (Kristofferson) and ends
up falling hard for a love-shy American dancer (Williams) who's training for a big
international competition in Vegas. Haines, a talented director (Children of a Lesser
God, Wrestling Ernest Hemingway) struggles valiantly to flesh out the wireframe-thin
script by dancer-turned-screenwriter Daryl Williams. The major settings of Kristofferson's
down-in-the-heels dance academy and the urban Cuban émigré neighborhoods
are accurately observed and quite real-seeming. Contrary to what the misleadingly
bombastic trailers suggest, Dance With Me's primary asset is not glitzy settings
and pumped-up sexuality but rather its funky, down-to-earth locales, quirky innocence,
and unpretentious, low-key acting. Chayanne, one of those nouveau hunks who uses
sweet, dorky charm to add ingratiating counterpoint to his mannequin-like good looks,
is a surprisingly adroit actor with obvious American crossover potential. Williams,
never more than a utility- grade performer, is passable in a role that doesn't ask
her to do much more than work up a sweat on the dance floor and smolder into the
camera with eyes as big and unnervingly bright as those Keaner Kids posters from
the Sixties. But again, let's acknowledge the importance of genre context. There's
hardly a speck of real story here, yet for true aficionados of Latin-Caribbean dance,
Haines makes this overlong film well worth seeing with a series of explosive, brilliantly
shot dance sequences that take place in varied settings ranging from residential
backyards to palatial ballrooms in Las Vegas. More a savory dessert than a nourishing
meal, Dance With Me still offers an energizing burst of sweetness that delights the
palate before fading quickly away.
--Russell Smith
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