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IMDbPro

Step Up 3D

  • 2010
  • 12A
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
62K
YOUR RATING
Sharni Vinson and Rick Malambri in Step Up 3D (2010)
A tight-knit group of New York City street dancers, including Luke (Malambri) and Natalie (Vinson), team up with NYU freshman Moose (Sevani), and find themselves pitted against the world's best hip hop dancers in a high-stakes showdown that will change their lives forever.
Play trailer2:59
25 Videos
99+ Photos
Coming-of-AgeDramaMusicRomance

A tight-knit group of New York City street dancers find themselves pitted against the world's best hip hop dancers in a high-stakes showdown.A tight-knit group of New York City street dancers find themselves pitted against the world's best hip hop dancers in a high-stakes showdown.A tight-knit group of New York City street dancers find themselves pitted against the world's best hip hop dancers in a high-stakes showdown.

  • Director
    • Jon M. Chu
  • Writers
    • Amy Andelson
    • Emily Meyer
    • Duane Adler
  • Stars
    • Sharni Vinson
    • Rick Malambri
    • Adam Sevani
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    62K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jon M. Chu
    • Writers
      • Amy Andelson
      • Emily Meyer
      • Duane Adler
    • Stars
      • Sharni Vinson
      • Rick Malambri
      • Adam Sevani
    • 100User reviews
    • 140Critic reviews
    • 45Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos25

    Step Up 3D: Promo Trailer
    Trailer 2:59
    Step Up 3D: Promo Trailer
    Step Up 3-D: Trailer #1
    Trailer 2:05
    Step Up 3-D: Trailer #1
    Step Up 3-D: Trailer #1
    Trailer 2:05
    Step Up 3-D: Trailer #1
    A Guide to the Films of Jon M. Chu
    Video 1:20
    A Guide to the Films of Jon M. Chu
    Step Up 3D: "This Is My Family"
    Clip 1:00
    Step Up 3D: "This Is My Family"
    Step Up 3D: “Robot Rock”
    Clip 0:49
    Step Up 3D: “Robot Rock”
    Step Up 3D: "Fancy Footwork”
    Clip 0:52
    Step Up 3D: "Fancy Footwork”

    Photos117

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    + 111
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Sharni Vinson
    Sharni Vinson
    • Natalie
    Rick Malambri
    Rick Malambri
    • Luke
    Adam Sevani
    Adam Sevani
    • Moose
    • (as Adam G. Sevani)
    Alyson Stoner
    Alyson Stoner
    • Camille
    Keith Stallworth
    Keith Stallworth
    • Jacob
    Kendra Andrews
    Kendra Andrews
    • Anala
    Stephen Boss
    Stephen Boss
    • Jason
    • (as Stephen 'tWitch' Boss)
    Martín Lombard
    Martín Lombard
    • The Santiago Twins
    Facundo Lombard
    Facundo Lombard
    • The Santiago Twins
    Oren Michaeli
    • Carlos
    • (as Oren 'Flearock' Michaeli)
    Joseph Slaughter
    Joseph Slaughter
    • Julien
    • (as Joe Slaughter)
    Daniel 'Cloud' Campos
    Daniel 'Cloud' Campos
    • Kid Darkness
    Aja George
    • The Ticks
    Straphanio 'Shonnie' Solomon
    • The Ticks
    Terence Dickson
    • The Ticks
    Chadd Smith
    Chadd Smith
    • Vladd
    • (as Chadd 'Madd Chadd' Smith)
    Britney 'B' Thomas
    • B.
    Terrance Harrison
    • Radius
    • Director
      • Jon M. Chu
    • Writers
      • Amy Andelson
      • Emily Meyer
      • Duane Adler
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews100

    6.261.5K
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    Featured reviews

    6saadgkhan

    Mind Blowing Dancing but Terrible acting except Adam G.Sevani & Alyson Stoner

    STEP UP 3D – CATCH IT ( B ) Step Up 3D has the most mind blowing and jaw dropping dancing. The music and dance performances of the movie are par excellence. All the dances are so fun to watch but Obviously the End Dance wins it all, it was Super Fantastic. The only thing Step up 3D lacked big time is its acting department, obviously all them can dance exceptionally well but their acting was quite poor except for Adam G.Sevani Aka. Moss and Alyson Stoner Aka. Cam. Adam and Alyson has prior acting experience so they were great along with their dancing. Adam and Alyson's road dance was one of the sweetest dance performance I've ever seen. Stunning looking Sharni Vinson danced really well and in some scenes she acted quite well. Gorgeous Boy Rick Malambri was the weakest Actor and Dancer among them all. His dancing with Sharni Vinson was great but in whole group he was the weakest link. Sadly, he had no expressions on his face whether he is serious, sad, happy or funny, he had the same expressions except when he Smiles. I think he got this job because of his looks because he is a terrible actor. One thing besides his good looks saved him was his awesome chemistry with Sharni Vinson. All the other dancers were great in dancing and terrible in acting. Overall its highly enjoyable because of its Incredible dance routines so, if we forget the terrible acting by most of them, its pretty good.
    7jnguyen46117

    Step Up 3D: 7/10

    The whole franchise is just about a group of street dancers dancing in the street?! Obviously, the plot isn't what we are here to watch. The only reason anyone even see this franchise is because they want to see some dancing. Acting, plot, story-telling, and writing, screw all of that. The only thing they need is a good choreographer and a director who specializes in dancing. Jon Chu is the correct choice since he directed the first Step Up and he did a fine job on this one also. The eye-popping 3D is what I like in particular to this. Adding in the 3D is a very risky but also right move. Everyone loves to see a dancing film in 3D! Aside from the bad acting, no plot, and the improvised dialogue, Step Up 3D is the best dancing film of the year.
    8jon.h.ochiai

    It's the Dance

    "Step Up 3D" maybe the best 3D movie since "Avatar". You laugh. For one thing "Step Up 3D" was filmed in 3D—no post production enhancement. Seeing amazing street dancing is visually stunning in 3D. One distinguishing sequence has Moose (Adam G. Sevani) splashing his moves on the water flooded stage. In another electrifying sequence the dance troop Pirates move in unison in LED lit costumes. One sees "Step Up 3D" for the 3D—entirely.

    No ground breaking storytelling here. Amy Anderson and Emily Meyer's screenplay barely eclipses perfunctory. This is the coming of age story of misunderstood young people overcoming the odds to compete in the First Annual World Dance Jam. The dialogue is awful. We endure the speaking interludes throughout the movie to get to the dancing, which is spectacular. Director Jon Chu has a dramatic sense of line and chaos with a provocative and flourishing visual style.

    The dancing is spectacular. Jon Chu has assembled some of the best street dancers in the world. The Santiago Twin (spirited Martin and Facundo Lombard) just kill in the World Dance Jam. Chadd Smith as Vlad, whose specialty is the Robot dance, is absolutely awesome—in 3D the effect is mesmerizing. Sharni Vinson, who plays stunningly beautiful and ripped nomad street dancer Natalie, is elevation and grace combined. The capoeira practice she performs with Luke (cool and handsome Rick Malambri) is high velocity precision. Chu is also a student of the classic musical. He films an homage to "Singing in the Rain" in a single take with Moose and his almost girlfriend Camile (Alyson Stoner) as they duet down the street. Chu also provides such visual texture and touch in the World Dance Jam itself mixing the Wushu influenced Asian street dancers along with the breakers and the poppers.

    Even with the corny dialogue and lame story lines, the opening sequence gets it right. Luke (Malambri) runs a shelter and dance studio for down and out street dancers- his parents' legacy. Luke's passion is film-making. As the movie opens we see Luke film interviews with his dancers. This wonderfully captures that dancers are never more present to life or have more joy than when they are dancing. Authentic passion transcends the written words, and is inspired. In a roundabout way "Step Up 3D" is at its best when it is in the moment in 3D, Otherwise, we are left with that Moose is too stupid, albeit a brilliant engineering student, to see that Camile is in love with him, and that he really loves her. Mysterious Natalie may not be who she appears, and that she and Luke are falling for each other. And does anyone really take a train to Los Angeles from New York?

    We kind of know the answers to these questions. So what there is to do is enjoy the dancing.
    7tbabe29

    So Bad It's Good!

    Okay, first of all, remember folks, that dancers aren't actors. And apparently no one was a writer either because the script sounded like it was written in about 10 minutes, BUT, this movie was thoroughly entertaining anyway.

    Me and my hip hoppers saw this movie after dance class and we were NOT disappointed! When we weren't watching the mesmerizing dance routines, we were laughing out loud at the horribly cheesy dialogue and plot.

    The best part of the movie,(besides the dancing), is the character Moose. He is our main protagonist and is the most believable in regards to acting and character development. He and his BFF have a more convincing romantic storyline than their two older beautiful people counterparts.

    If you can kick back, relax, and enjoy the dancing and not take this movie too seriously, you will love it! Especially if you are a dancer.
    5Troy_Campbell

    The dancing = impressive. Everything else = dreadful.

    If you've seen one break-dance flick, then let's be frank, you've seen them all. The blue print is the same each and every time, lots of awesome dance sequences with gap-filling scenes of excruciating acting, non-existent plot and direlogue that wouldn't feel out of place in a Z-grade horror film. With those standards in mind, the most effective entries into this genre do two very simple things: maximise the eye-boggling dance routines and minimise the yawn-inducing guff that fills the rest of the runtime.

    Step Up 3D only gets half of the above equation right. An unnecessary amount of time is wasted on boring dross like predictable plot twists and deep and meaningful (read: long and laughable) conversations about how profoundly dancing can affect people. Honestly, who cares? From the moment the main character tells his new BFF that "he's BFAB, born from a beatbox" in the first ten minutes, all further dialogue should've been ceased immediately. I'm serious, they should've let the music and moves do the talking for the remaining 90 minutes. That way our gag-reflex wouldn't have been tested by Vinson (ex-Home and Away star) and Malambri's acting.

    When the bodies are twirling, contorting, flinging, jumping, smashing or moving like a robot the film unsurprisingly finds its legs. Choreographed with flair and panache, the set-pieces incorporate the 3D technology decently enough by having dancers approach the camera with fast, whippy hand movements, however the depth of the stage was employed more successfully by its British counterpart StreetDance 3D. Regardless, there are still a handful of entertaining dance-offs that impress on varying levels.

    Replete with the freshest hip-hop tunes and sporadic inventiveness – mainly in the form of illuminated costumes – this trilogy-closer may tickle your fancy, but that is wholly reliant on whether you're BFAB or not.

    2.5 out of 5 (1 - Rubbish, 2 - Ordinary, 3 - Good, 4 - Excellent, 5 - Classic)

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      With an opening weekend tally of $15.8 million, this was the lowest-earning movie of the "Step Up" movies. However, the film went on to international grosses of $159,000,000, making it the biggest earner of its (at the time) films.
    • Goofs
      At the final battle where Julien takes 2 of his crew members as dogs with chains, he once wears his jacket, the next shot he stands there without it and so on.
    • Quotes

      Luke: [from trailer] Some people learn to dance... Others are born to.

    • Crazy credits
      At the beginning of the end credits there's a scene in which Jay Franco (aka J-Smooth) sits on a chair and performs an impressive catalog of finger tutting moves
    • Connections
      Featured in The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Episode #18.93 (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Empire State of Mind
      Written by Jay-Z (as Shawn Carter), Alicia Keys (as Alicia Augello-Cook), Angela Hunte, Bert Keyes, Sylvia Robinson, Janet Sewell (as Jane't Sewell), Al Shux (as Al Shuckburgh)

      Performed by Jay-Z featuring Alicia Keys

      Courtesy of Atlantic Recording Corp.

      By Arrangement with Warner Music Group Film & TV Licensing

      Alicia Keys appears courtesy of J Records

      Contains a sample of "Love on a Two Way Street"

      Performed by The Moments

      Courtesy of Sugarhill Records Ltd.

      By Arrangement with Warner Music Group Film & TV Licensing

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 6, 2010 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Step Up 3
    • Filming locations
      • 290 S Garey St, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Summit Entertainment
      • Touchstone Pictures
      • Offspring Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $30,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $42,400,223
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $15,812,311
      • Aug 8, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $159,291,809
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 47 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
      • DTS
      • Dolby Surround 7.1
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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