Review: Craig Brewer finds the beat for appealing remake of 'Footloose'
Great chemistry is the secret to a successful update of the '80s fave
- Critic's Rating B
- Readers' Rating n/a
Julianne Hough is just one of the many reasons to enjoy Craig Brewer's new remake of the '80s dance film 'Footloose'
Much of 1980s pop culture bounced off of me. There were many giant hits that I simply wasn't interested in, and "Footloose" was one of those. I saw it. I was aware of it. The soundtrack was omnipresent. But it wasn't really my cup of tea. It was only later, looking at it in the context of Herbert Ross's career, that I considered the film and really appreciated what it is. The film works as a story of teenage rebellion and it works as a dance-based musical for the age in which it was made. Ross was the right choice for that picture based on his history with musical films, and his "Turning Point" is one of the classic dance movies of all time.
Hiring Craig Brewer to helm the remake of the film was inspired, and it pays off as a choice in the way he's approached the material. Brewer's script is reverential to Dean Pitchford's script for the original, but it also manages to have its own voice. The film opens with a sequence that immediately recalls the title sequence from the original film, close-ups of dancing feet, a great way to kick off with energy and charm and letting the audience know that it's going to get something familiar but with a new edge to it.
The new film stays close enough to the general structure of the original that Pitchford actually shares screenplay credit with Brewer, and fans of the original will see all the same relationships and basic characters. Ren McCormack is still the new kid in town, although he's Kenny Wormald this time instead of Kevin Bacon. And Ariel Moore is still the spirited daughter of Reverend Shaw Moore, with Julianne Hough and Dennis Quaid standing in for Lori Singer and John Lithgow. Miles Teller is the best friend Willard instead of Chris Penn. And the new casting is interesting because I think it reveals where the film's focus lies. Wormald is a formally trained and award-winning dancer, and Hough is a "Dancing With The Stars" vet. The emphasis here is on the dancing, and Brewer's film captures the energy of southern youth culture with some excellent dance sequences. Hough and Wormald come to full life when they're dancing, and when you see Wormald's "angry dance," a direct nod to the first film's most famous scene, he nails it. Bacon's a better actor than Wormald, and even in something like "Footloose," there was something dangerous about Bacon, something that made him an interesting lead in something as mainstream and pop as that. Wormald scowls a bit, but his Ren is such an immediately decent guy that I don't think you could use the word "dangerous" to describe him in any way.
Hough is more interesting, though. Like Wormald, she can throw down during the dance scenes, and she certainly looks right in the non-stop parade of cut-off jeans and bare-midriff shirts that they dress her in. But in the film's dramatic scenes, she's the stand-out. She's the one that surprises. Miles Teller was great in "Rabbit Hole," so I'm not surprised that his job here seems to be to carry his scenes with Wormald, and he does it very well. But Hough actually has chops, and she's good in her scenes with Dennis Quaid, who plays his character as a broken-hearted overprotective father, his fear almost palpable at all times. His gradual thaw is played well here, and the film never makes him a snarling cartoonish bad guy. He and Hough have a few tough scenes, and she gives as good as he does in the scenes.
Brewer makes good use of the songs from the 1984 film that work, and while the film is too long, dragging out the drama, it's got a real pulse. The movie is well-shot by Amy Vincent, who shot Brewer's breakthrough film "Hustle & Flow" and "Black Snake Moan." They've got a really rich creative collaboration going on at this point, and the thing they do so well is capture the smell and the feel of a place. Bomont feels like a town that exists, not something set up for the cameras, and there's a lovely regional vibe to the movie. I like that Brewer is an unapologetically southern filmmaker, and I like the joy and the respect that seems to fuel his film. Even when the town is wrong with the laws they pass, there's the sense in his movie that the people making those choices did so because they love their kids and they love their community, and they're doing what they can do to hold this life together. There's one bad guy in the film, town douchebag Chuck Cranston, but he's easily dealt with, and he never overpowers the film. Ray McKinnon, Kim Dickens, and a whole slew of familiar "that guy" faces fill out the adult and teen cast well, and I think Ziah Colon in particular is worth mention. She's Ariel's best friend Rusty, and she's ridiculously charming. Even with very little to do on the page, she gives her character a substantial weight in the film simply by virtue of her own sunny presence. Films like this largely succeed or fail based on the chemistry of the casts, and Brewer struck gold here.
I still don't think "Footloose" is amazing, but I think fans of the original should be pleased at how much respect has been shown to that movie. For a new generation, this is a heartfelt film that stands on its own, a solid story about how hard it is to let our kids grow up and make their own mistakes, and how even the best of parental intentions can curdle at times.
"Footloose" opens in theaters everywhere tomorrow.
News From Our Partners
-
What to Watch This Weekend: The Season Finales of Nikita, Doctor Who, The Simpsons, and Family Guy
The Office Series Finale Review: That'll Do, Show. That'll Do.
Syfy Renews Warehouse 13 for a Fifth and Final Season
-
The Wrap Up: Remember 'The Office' With the Ultimate Blooper Reel
The Sims 3: Island Paradise's Producer Walkthrough Shows Us the Finer Points of Tropical Life
'Man of Steel' Featurette: Reinventing Superman
-
Weekly Ketchup: Will Smith to Star in Wild Bunch Remake?
Critics Consensus: Star Trek Into Darkness is Certified Fresh
Red Carpet Roundup: Star Trek Into Darkness Edition
-
The Telefile - The Most Heinous Person on Reality TV This Week
The Telefile - Modern Family: The Best Lines of the Night
The Telefile - Fall TV 2013: What's On When
-
Beyonce Pregnant Again? Sources Confirm 'Epic' Star Is Carrying Baby No. 2
'Hangover 3' Red Band Trailer: Take a Walk Down a NSFW Memory Lane (VIDEO)
Why 'Man of Steel' Didn't Use 'Superman' in the Title
-
Kendall Schmidt of Big Time Rush Loses $7,000 Worth of Gifts for Fans [Video]
Kanye West to Drop New Album 'Yeezus' on June 18
Justin Bieber + Selena Gomez Will Sit Together at 2013 Billboard Music Awards
-
The 'Doctors' Unite
'We Are Men' In 4 Words
MTV Legend Recalls Heavy Metal Frontman's Anti-Gay T-Shirt Controversy
-
Cannes Film Festival: Cannes 2013, Day Three: Cheers for the young stars of The Selfish Giant, jeers for the new films by Hirokazu Kore-eda and Arnaud Desplechin
Hear This: Destroy This Place shows how press releases can get it right
Watch This: With Beavis And Butt-head Do America, Mike Judge skewered the idiocy of cinematic adventures
Get Instant Alerts on Motion/Captured
Latest Posts
-
This is one you'll want to watch as soon as you've seen the movieFriday, May 17, 2013
-
Plus we look back at a more spirited encounter with the comic actorThursday, May 16, 2013
-
The Channing Tatum/Mila Kunis science-fiction action movie is shooting nowThursday, May 16, 2013
-
Hollywood's busiest alien spends a little more time with StarfleetThursday, May 16, 2013


Comments
Option 1
Comment instantly as a guest GuestOption 2
Option 3
Login or create a HitFix account Login SignupMishell
October 13, 2011 at 3:58PM EST Reply to CommentHey check out an amazing interview with the original "Ren McCormack" Kevin Bacon at: http://culturecatch.com/vidcast/kevin-bacon
Jack_Steen
October 13, 2011 at 4:21PM EST Reply to CommentANOTHER WITLESS HOLLYWEIRD REMAKE ?!
WHEN is this silly shit going to cease ?
Don't the $cientologist OVERLORDS have any NEW IDEAS ?!
ChampSkins Typically I would agree... and I love the original - but I see nothing wrong with a remake to get a new and younger generation the same message and entertainment the original had. Especially if it isn't as bad as most are saying...
October 13, 2011 at 5:04PM ESTevolution1085
October 13, 2011 at 5:49PM EST Reply to CommentI never understood how anybody could sit through the movie (in the 80s or even now) without thinking "this law would be on the books for 12 seconds before it made a newspaper/the internet/twitter and the town would become the laughingstock of the country leading any judge in their right mind to throw out the law without hearing any arguments at all"
DefRef
October 13, 2011 at 6:22PM EST Reply to CommentThe whole time I was watching this at a screening last week I was thinking, "Is any of this really necessary?" The wholesale use of so many elements of the original - the VW, the burgundy suit, the "Let's Hear It For The Boy" dance training montage, punch-dancing his anger out, so many of the old songs remade, etc. - made this version feel on the wrong side of the homage/slavish recreation line. I probably saw it on VHS in he mid-Eighties and never saw it since and I was simply bored the whole time.
I find it odd that Drew couldn't connect with The Thing because it's so tied to the original but gives this one a pass when it's just as tied, if not more so. Yeah, Hough has a slammin' bod and big blue eyes. So what? Wormald looks like a cut-rate Skeet Ulrich who is himself a dime store Johnny Depp.
dustin
October 13, 2011 at 9:14PM EST Reply to CommentI haven't even seen the original. I just don't care.
Chris Barela
October 14, 2011 at 4:48PM EST Reply to CommentHow come no one thinks twice about a beloved song being covered yet when a movie is remade it's the end of the freaking world?
DB Cooper
October 14, 2011 at 11:04PM EST Reply to CommentI could care less about the movie. I just wanted to complement Drew on the review. This review is original, but evokes the Great Roger Ebert in a lot of ways. Well done.