This isn't a poorly made movie in the traditional sense it isn't full of continuity holes or bad special effects. These are people who work a hard day's living dancing then go home and blow off some steam by, what else, dancing. There is so much dancing in this movie that it frequently appears that the plot is intruding on it, and not the other way around. No exaggeration here over the course of ninety-four boogie filled minutes, dancing stops bulldozers, pays bills, ends gang wars, and even cures the ill and the infirm (One person bounds out of the wheelchair in jubilation apparently they simply forgot they could walk). It's fortunate that the trio live in an alternate universe in which breakdancing can solve all of society's ills. In this installment the trio try to save a youth center named Miracles from the clutches of evil (read: white and unhip) government bigwigs who want to bulldoze the unsafe building and make way for a new shopping center. Or so I assume, I haven't seen Breakin, but the three main characters Kelly (Lucinda Dickey), Ozone (Adolfo Quinones) and Turbo (Michael Chambers) are the same. Few movies are as bizarre, yet oddly compelling at the same time.īecause one movie wasn't enough to contain these people Breakin 2 picks up where the first movie picks off. No description does it justice, no warning truly gives you an idea of what you are in store for. Nothing in the world can prepare you for Breakin 2: Electric Boogaloo.
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December 2022
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