Follow us on

Archive

Step Up 3D

Step Up 3D

2010

New York’s street dancing underground goes three dimensional in the third Step Up movie.

A tight-knit group of street dancers team up with NYU freshman Moose (Adam Sevani returning from Step Up 2) and find themselves pitted against the world’s best hip hop dancers in a high-stakes showdown.

Starring Alyson Stoner, Harry Shum Jr., Sharni Vinson, Adam G. Sevani, Ally Maki, Rick Malambri

Directed by Jon Chu ('Step Up 2: The Streets')

Written by Amy Andelson, Emily Meyer

Romance, Music, Dance, 3D | 1hr 46mins | Rated (M) | Contains Offensive Language | Origin: USA | Official Site »

Trailers
Reviews
  • SHARE:
    Tweet This Send to Facebook Email View more services

The Talk

18 votes / No comments

0

Want to see it

What say you? Yes No

  •  

     

  • Be the first to comment!

  •  

     

Get it off your chest:

Want to see it?

The people's reviews

2 reviews

Write your review...

  • After submitting your review, you will need to login or signup to Flicks.
    Don't worry though, we'll keep your review and post it after you're done.

Press Reviews

  • Christchurch Press (James Croot)

    The action shifts from Baltimore to Brooklyn in this middling, latest instalment of the popular dance series.
    Read full review

  • TV3 (Kate Rodger)

    Step Up 3D is not really my thing, but it was more than I expected, and I suspect it will nicely serve its target market.
    Read full review

  • TVNZ (Darren Bevan)

    Ultimately the 3D element in this Step Up is a little wasted and doesn't really bring much to the genre - but your teens will adore it and may well be inspired by it all.
    Read full review

  • Urban Cinefile (Australia)

    There's a poorly contrived plot that pits two rival dance gangs against each other as they compete for a $100,000 jackpot and there is little tension or angst as secrets are revealed, loyalties redefined and all the story strands are neatly tied into predictable outcomes. Pipped at the post by Streetdance 3D, this energetic dance film is entertaining enough but doesn't step up to any challenges.
    Read full review

Search the Archive

I beg your pardon?

  • Flicks.co.nz is serving the great nation of NZ with all things cinematic. Question about a movie or cinema? Thoughts on the site? Quips, gripes, advice for our own personal self-development?
  • Get in touch with us by email at ED@ FLICKS.CO.NZ,on TWITTER oron FACEBOOK.

Flicks User Ratings

Find out more