Recommend a good one. A light love plus revolutionary inspirational movie, dance scene a lot, very beautiful!
Title: Dirty Dancing XVII: Havana Nights
Also translated: Dirty Dancing 2: Havana Nights
English title: Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights
Directed by Guy Ferland
Starring: Ramona Gray Romola Garai
Diego Luna Diego Luna
Rene Lavan Rene Lavan
January Jones January Jones
John Slattery John Slattery
R&B singer Mya
Written by Vittori -Victoria Arch
Ronald Bass Ronald Bass
Genre: Romance/Drama/Music/Performing Arts
Rated PG-13 (for sexual advances)
Length: 86 minutes
Distribution: Artisan Entertainment Artisan Entertainment
Release Date: February 27, 2004 (more territories)
A Sexy Encounter with a Hot Spanish Dancing Hottie
The story takes place in Havana, the capital city of Cuba, in November 1958, where 18-year-old Katie Mills (Ramona Gray), a traditional American girl, enjoys life around her. while fantasizing about going to an exotic country to fall in love with a romantic flavor. Katie's curiosity about other countries is so strong that she used to want to travel to Spain, but instead of going to Spain, she follows her father, who is in charge of Chrysler Motors' sales in South America, to Havana, the capital of Cuba, which is full of flavor.
Havana, full of South American flavors, is a place where everything is new to Katie, and she is enjoying all the fun. At the Ocean Hotel, where she and her parents stayed, Katie loved to participate in the dances held every night in the hotel lobby, and her beautiful, high-color dancing surpassed all the girls there, which made her feel very proud and happy ......
Because of the dance, so in love
"Havana" is rich in Latin flavors and dances. Love intoxicates, and the film exudes the same charm as its 1987 original, "Hot Dance Seventeen," where frantic dancing and lustful love combine to transform into a seductive dance of lingering tenderness and glue. 7 years ago, the film "Hot Dance Seventeen" told the story of the passionate love affair between a 17-year-old girl, vacationing in a small country town in 1963, and her rebellious and unruly dance teacher, which, upon its release, immediately became a major success story in the world of dance with its The attraction of the erotic dance became the box office dark horse that year, more than 20 million viewers into the movie theater to feel the story of this dancer's passionate love.
Dance allows feelings that are difficult to express with words to be expressed by the body, especially for Cubans, who are not very good with words, which was the idea of the production staff when they made this sequel dance movie. When we danced, the connection between the male and female dancers was more than just At that point it felt more like a physical freedom, the thrill of expressing with the body. I found that I could dance in any position I wanted and not pay attention to others, it was my body and my personality.
Four kinds of dance: hotel & underground & ballroom & street
Professional choreographer Jona Jensen was asked by the crew to be the film's choreographer, and she designed four styles of dance moves based on the different dance scenes, which brought the audience four different visual treats. In the high-class Imperial nightclub, she designed a step-by-step style of dance, which is more traditional and kitschy, like an aristocratic ball for socializing only. In the underground clubs of Havana, she designed dances based on her Cuban experience that were dirty and obscene, emphasizing the primitive wildness and desire.
As for the dance of a group of American teenage girls at the ball held shortly after the start of Havana, she designed it in a rock and roll style to showcase the youthful charms of these happy girls. In addition, those dances improvised at any time in the streets and plazas of Havana, dancer Jona set the background music for them, so that these dances show the joy of life and physical pleasure ......
Dance & Music: Cuban Style Painting
In Cuba, where the birth of musical geniuses and legends, music is the root of their culture, influencing the nation while bringing joy to people all over the world with the charm of Latin flavor, which used to be the temple of jazz music. Dance is more like the bloodline of Cuban culture, where the moody Latin dance and the joyful chirping dance were born. Films about Cuban music, such as The Arturo Sandoval Story (The Arturo Sandoval Story), which tells the story of a legendary jazz musician, and Buena Vista Social (Buena Vista Social), a documentary about an old Cuban musician, have remained in our memories with a unique Cuban flavor in their shots and images.