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Stomp The Yard (2007)
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Reviews Counted:86
Fresh:23
Rotten:63
Average Rating:4.5/10
Consensus: While Stomp the Yard contains impressive musical and dance numbers, it loses its momentum during the intervening soap opera-style subplots.
Runtime: 1 hr 56 mins
Genre: Dramas
US Box Office: $61,356,221
Synopsis: When DJ (Columbus Short), a troubled youth from Los Angeles, moves to Atlanta to attend Truth University, he discovers "stepping," the age-old style of dance traditionally done in African-American... When DJ (Columbus Short), a troubled youth from Los Angeles, moves to Atlanta to attend Truth University, he discovers "stepping," the age-old style of dance traditionally done in African-American Fraternities, where teams demonstrate complex moves and create rhythmic sounds by using their bodies. DJ's raw talent and hip-hop inspired moves quickly place him at the center of a fierce rivalry between two fraternities, the winner of which will be determined in front of a sold-out arena at the annual stepping championships. But before he can help his teammates, he must battle his own demons and learn the true meaning of brotherhood. A compelling drama about the quest for individuality and the power of fraternity, Stomp the Yard features some of the most original and exhilarating dance performances ever filmed. Starring Columbus Short (Save the Last Dance 2, Accepted) and Meagan Good (Waist Deep, Roll Bounce), Stomp the Yard is directed by award-winning music video and commercial director Sylvain White (I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summer), who brings his innovative visual style and explosive energy to the production. When an urban dance battle ends in violence, champion street dancer DJ Williams (Columbus Short) travels from the underground clubs of inner city Los Angeles to the moneyed precincts of Atlanta's prestigious, historically black Truth University. Although his athleticism and ambition have made him a top competitor in the gritty world of street dancing, DJ feels out of place at Truth, with its elite fraternities and expectations of professional success. It is in this alien environment that DJ discovers the world of stepping. An African-American tradition that has evolved from the centuries-old African Boot Dance, it combines precise dance steps with chants and percussive hand and foot movements. At Truth, it also plays a pivotal role in the longstanding rivalry between two campus fraternities. When DJ shows off his dance skills at a local club, he attracts the attention of Truth's top fraternities and campus beauty April (Meagan Good), setting off a vicious feud with April's boyfriend Grant (Darrin Henson) - who also happens to be a star stepper for Mu Gamma Xi. After DJ decides to join rival Theta Nu Theta, his bold street style revitalizes the decades long competition between the frats and challenges the stepping supremacy of Mu Gamma. But his arrogance and self-centeredness quickly put DJ at odds with his new fraternity brothers. With Grant plotting to have him expelled just before the most important competition of the year, DJ must put aside his pride and learn the true meaning of fraternity. In a breathtaking finale, the two teams square off in an epic, freestyle battle that propels stepping to a thrilling new level. --copy; Screen Gems [More]
Starring: Columbus Short, Meagan Good, Laz Alonso, Harry J. Lennix
Starring: Columbus Short, Meagan Good, Laz Alonso, Harry J. Lennix, Jermaine Williams, Brian J. White, Ne-Yo, Michael Ngaujah
Director: Sylvain White
Director: Sylvain White
Screenwriter: Robert Adetuyi, Gregory Anderson
Producer: William Packer, Porter Verselft III
Studio: Screen Gems
Reviews for Stomp The Yard
There is so much yet so little on the screen: so much movement and action, but so little to cling on to. So much angst, so little context.
Short’s moody DJ is easy enough to root for, while Brian White also shows sparks in the slender role of an older brother.
If the rest of Stomp the Yard were half as deft as its footwork, it'd be watchable. As it is, everything that doesn't happen on stage is a major stumble.
I couldn't stop groaning and rolling my eyes throughout "Stomp the Yard," a shamelessly predictable and laughable underdog yarn.
As expected, there's a final contest that resolves a whole mess of conflicts. But before that, Stomp the Yard flirts with several silly soap opera subplots while twisting its way around to a cursory touch of social consciousness.
Some viewers may feel as if they’re sharing in the struggle and splendor that leads to a national step-dancing tournament. But the more you’ve seen this sort of inspirational tale before, the less likely you are to be interested in its parade of clichés.
We have drugs, gangs, guns, and rock n' roll, but dancing is a form of street toughness? What's next, to-the-death tickle matches?
The problem is everything in between the production numbers. In most movies, that is called plot and character development. In Stomp The Yard, it is a rip-off of a bunch of beat-up, banal, and intellectually empty cliches.
It's too bad they missed a few beats because it throws the movie just out of sync.
If there is any sort of cultural relevance to be found in a movie like Stomp the Yard, it's that spectacles don't even matter anymore: We just need the possibility of a spectacle.
If it's the dancing that interests you, the movie to watch is the krumping documentary Rize. It's 90 minutes of fantastic dancing with no stupid dialogue to mess it up.
The rhythmic step dancing is infectious in the otherwise formulaic underdog flick Stomp the Yard -- so much so, you'll want to see more of it and less of a plot.
Director Sylvain White goes by the book, except in the early scenes where he gives new meaning to the concept of a shaky camera. Initially, the camera work is so frenetic as to be off-putting and dizzying.
What newbie screenwriter Robert Adetuyi and music video director Sylvain White intend is to reinvent the clunky step moves as an extension of freestyle hip-hop under an umbrella of collegiate comradeship.
[Director Sylvain] White has a good cast but directs the fiercely macho dances in a choppy, video-buzzed manner that breaks up patterns and fuzzes some steps.
Latest News for Stomp The Yard
October 22, 2009:
Stomp the Yard Sequel Imminent ![]()
You'd better watch out, yard -- you're gonna get stomped again! Yes, that's right, "Stomp the Yard 2" is on the way, and writer-director Rob Hardy has agreed to helm the sequel. More...
December 05, 2008:
The Cadillac Records Interviews: Columbus Short And Mos Def Not Into Bow Wow ![]()
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January 24, 2008:
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January 10, 2008:
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