Footloose (1984)
When teenager Ren and his family move from big-city Chicago to a small town in the West, he's in for a real case of culture shock.
Footloose (1984)
Information
Released Year: 1984
Runtime: 107 minutes
Directors: Herbert Ross
Casts: Chris Penn, Kevin Bacon, John Lithgow, Brian Wimmer, Sarah Jessica Parker, Marcia Gay Harden, Frances Lee McCain, Dianne Wiest, Michael Flynn, John Bishop, Timothy Scott, Brian L. McCarty, Jim Youngs, Leo Geter, H.E.D. Redford, Oscar Rowland, J. Paul Broadhead, Lori Singer, Alan Haufrect, John Laughlin, Elizabeth Gorcey, Douglas Dirkson, Lynne Marta, Arthur Rosenberg, Linda MacEwen, Kim Jensen, Michael Telmont, Ken Kemp, Russ McGinn, Sam Dalton, Jay Bernard, David Valenza, Meghan Broadhead, Mimi Broadhead, Gene Pack, Marcia Dangerfield, John Perryman, Mary Ethel Gregory, Carmen Trevino, Melissa Renee Graehl, Monica M. Da Silva, Terri Gay Ulmer, Brandyn Cross, Kevin Denson, Deborah Frazier, Andrea Hays, Michele Laurita, Alison Trouse
IMDB: Footloose (1984)
Storyline
When teenager Ren and his family move from big-city Chicago to a small town in the West, he's in for a real case of culture shock.
Trailer
Reviews
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Variety -
By writing both the screenplay and contributing lyrics to nine of the film’s songs, Dean Pitchford has come up with an integrated story line that works.
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Chicago Reader -
The musical sequences are good enough that they make you wish Ross had been willing to leave the surface realism behind and break out into the high stylization and exuberance of the genre's classic days. Despite the hesitations, it's miles above "Flashdance" in technique and intelligence.
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Newsweek -
The bottom lineis that "Footloose" has a lively, sweet, infectious spirit, and for that one is willing to overlook some clunky scenes, fuzzy motivations, gratuitous brawls and the failure to evoke this town with any sociological coherence. It works because Bacon, always a fine actor, and Singer make a golden and winning couple; because Lithgow invests his ogreish character with troubled and compassionate shadings; because of Christopher Penn's scene-stealing performance as Bacon's naive lug of a friend; because the rocking sound track features hot new songs like "Let's Hear It for the Boy," performed by Deniece Williams; and because everyone, fundamentalists excepted, will identify with the kids. [20 Feb 1984, p.78]
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New York Daily News -
Footloose turns out to be a sort of Boy Scout version of “Flashdance,” a carefully toned-down, overly respectable piece of schmaltz.
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IGN -
The movie is predictable and formulaic and all of those things, but it's great in spite of itself.
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Related Movies
When teenager Ren and his family move from big-city Chicago to a small town in the West, he's in for a real case of culture shock.
When teenager Ren and his family move from big-city Chicago to a small town in the West, he's in for a real case of culture shock.
When teenager Ren and his family move from big-city Chicago to a small town in the West, he's in for a real case of culture shock.
When teenager Ren and his family move from big-city Chicago to a small town in the West, he's in for a real case of culture shock.