![]() ![]() They clash in the middle of the roads taunting each other to dole out some new moves. They constantly clash at Prabhudheva’s pub while watching cricket matches. ![]() We understand the two teams - Sehaj’s Street Dancers and Inayat’s Rule Breaker - are rivals. But Street Dancer 3D, which is based in London, takes too long to get there. ![]() In between these dance sequences, lies an emotional tale involving illegal immigrants, shattered dreams, and rigid stereotypes. Unfortunately, this is the only cliche he saves us from, as he goes to town on every dance movie trope that has existed since the Step Up series was unleashed on an unsuspecting audience in 2006.Īfter taking a detour to make a superhero film ( A Flying Jatt) and a drab addition to a franchise that has overstayed its welcome ( Race 3), Remo returns to what he does best - assemble one dance-off after another to string together a film that has its heart in the right place. While I was afraid this angle would be milked to give us yet another jingoistic chest-thumping clarion call for a ‘surgical dance strike’ on our neighbouring country, writer-director Remo D’Souza saves us from this cliche. But in ABCD 3… I mean, Street Dancer 3D, the kind-hearted dancer, Prabhudheva, and the… well, kind-hearted dancer Nora Fatehi, play supporting roles to Varun Dhawan and Shraddha Kapoor's Sahej and Inayat, an Indian and a Pakistani, respectively. ![]()
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