Mature themes
| Director: | Craig Brewer |
| Actors: | Kenny Wormald, Julianne Hough, Dennis Quaid, Ray McKinnon, Ziah Colon, Miles Teller, Andie MacDowell |
Director Craig Brewer (Hustle & Flow, Black Snake Moan) delivers a new take of the beloved 1984 classic film Footloose. Ren MacCormack (played by newcomer Kenny Wormald) is transplanted from Boston to the small southern town of Bomont where he experiences a heavy dose of culture shock. A few years prior, the community was rocked by a tragic accident that killed five teenagers after a night out and Bomont's local councilmen and the beloved Reverend Shaw Moore (Dennis Quaid) responded by implementing ordinances that prohibit loud music and dancing. Not one to bow to the status quo, Ren challenges the ban, revitalizing the town and falling in love with the minister's troubled daughter Ariel (Julianne Hough) in the process.
| Status: | QuickPick |
|---|---|
| Run time: | 90mins |
| Origin: | UNITED STATES |
| Aspect Ratio: | 16:9 |

Craig Brewer directs films like a man with electricity emanating from his fingertips. It feels like his pictures might, at any point, ignite into a fiery ball of sex (and his last feature, Black Snake Moan, almost literally does). His movies begin so ecstatically; the remainder of each could virtually coast on the rocket-fuelled adrenaline of their opening sequences. But he’s not one to squander a captive audience. Littered throughout are musical sequences so vibrantly conducted and composed that they send shivers down your spine, no matter how many times you’ve seen them. His latest pic, a remake of Footloose, is not as impressive as his impassioned breakout flick Hustle and Flow, but it achieves the unthinkable. Out-Frankensteining Dr. Frankenstein himself, Brewer jolts unbridled life in...
Craig Brewer directs films like a man with electricity emanating from his fingertips. It feels like his pictures might, at any point, ignite into a fiery ball of sex (and his last feature, Black Snake Moan, almost literally does). His movies begin so ecstatically; the remainder of each could virtually coast on the rocket-fuelled adrenaline of their opening sequences. But he’s not one to squander a captive audience. Littered throughout are musical sequences so vibrantly conducted and composed that they send shivers down your spine, no matter how many times you’ve seen them. His latest pic, a remake of Footloose, is not as impressive as his impassioned breakout flick Hustle and Flow, but it achieves the unthinkable. Out-Frankensteining Dr. Frankenstein himself, Brewer jolts unbridled life into a 27-year-old tale about illegal and immoral dancing in a small but super-religious Southern town. I offer this hyperbole not to paint Brewer as the Terrence Malick of modern exploitation cinema, but instead to offer a reminder that in the right hands, these kinds of features (reboots, dance flicks, whatever) can still be good. Footloose is what we talk about when we talk about having fun at the movies.
Kenny Wormald stars as Ren McCormack, a newly-orphaned Bostonian teenager who moves to the teensy Southern town of Bomont to live with his aunt and uncle. An eager dancer and former gymnast, he’s astounded by Bomont’s arcane (but actually only three-years-old) law against public dancing and curfews for teenagers, endorsed by local Reverend Moore (Dennis Quaid). The holy man has his reasons; his only son and four other teens were claimed in a drunken car accident after one particular party went off the rails. But that was then, and this is now, and Ren is eager to bring some life back to this constantly-mourning town. And if he should attract the Rev's bad girl daughter Ariel (Julianne Hough) in the process, so be it.
Footloose never quite overcomes the silliness of the core story, but it ably dances (geddit?) around it thanks to a solid cast (particularly, and surprisingly, newcomers Wormald and Hough, as well as Rabbit Hole's Miles Teller as their buddy Willard), and Brewer’s aforementioned steady (and when necessary, unhinged) hand at the wheel. If you’re looking for something beneath the surface, it works as a sweet parable about parents slowly loosening the grip they have on their children. But who needs to reach for that kind of thoughtful analysis when the dance scenes are as incredible as they are here? (I'm kidding; thoughtful analysis is good fun.) They intermittently capture the intensity of David LaChapelle’s documentary Rize, but still make sense and work in the context of the film’s reality. Even during the infamous ‘angry dance’ bit (note to the people behind the abysmal Step Ups; this is how you do it). The cinematography from DOP Amy Vincent is sumptuous, adding a level of professionalism and polish to the finished product that helps elevate it above other lazy reimaginings of nostalgic classics. Brewer understands the importance of setting, and grounds his features with a sense of place. Bomont feels like a real town, and these feel like real events. Ridiculous, but real events.
I’ve not seen the original Footloose; it wasn’t of my generation, and I’ve felt no need to check it out ahead of, say, Fast Times at Ridgemont High or Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. Therefore, I can’t assure fans of the first that it doesn’t desecrate its memory. But as it stands alone, Brewer's Footloose is indeed a fancy-free and (I’ll say it again) fun time. It also – at a pivotal point – has the good sense to avoid a ‘slow clap’, when you just know it would have been so easy to go there. And I appreciated that.
4/5