This "Bring It On" installment focuses on The Rebels as they accept a virtual cheerleading battle against The Truth.This "Bring It On" installment focuses on The Rebels as they accept a virtual cheerleading battle against The Truth.This "Bring It On" installment focuses on The Rebels as they accept a virtual cheerleading battle against The Truth.
- Didit
- (as Stephan Lee Benson)
- Cheerleader #1
- (as Sophie De Bruyn)
- Boy Cheerleader #1
- (as Joshua Eady)
- Willow
- (as Gia Ré)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Saying that the characters lack depth pretty much sums it up. I do however rewatch and rewatch and analyze this and analyze that and Cristine Prosperi is a total jewel in here rising far far far above the rest. Unfortunately that doesn't say much. The girl who plays Hannah in here was clearly inspired by Hanna of PRETTY LITTLE LIARS but unfortunately, Ashley Benson she is NOT. She gives her lines as if reading them off. Later developments in the script depend very heavily on this very weak link to carry the story, and predictably, she fails spectacularly, and the movie slides out in a whimper. The Rebels do their performance wearing long pants? The lead girl sort of fades out towards the end. She is still there, but dimmed out. Vivica A. Fox (what a name!)'s Cheer Goddess comes across as kinda more than a little bit weird, even slurring words.
As for the very heart of it all, some pretty vivid foxes, yeah. Worth watching, yeah. Not really a good movie, no. But Cristina is worth the price of entry alone. The rest of the cast is a cheer-tastrophy, though.
Certainly kills off the franchise, no doubt nobody's gonna touch this for LONG TIME.
But I've neglected to say a truly heartfelt thing. Cheerleaders get bad treatment in many stories, but they deserve to be an Olympic event. Only they shouldn't be called cheerleaders. This ranks them second to male-dominated sports. To me the highest form of excellence is this "flying bird" with the colorful plumage (fortunately with better legs). Unfortunately the risks are SEVERE when it comes to being tossed up in the air and having to come down... ballerinas are wonderful till you find out their reality... Cheerleaders are much the same. But they are all to be revered.
A little post script by this South African:
Ha ha ha. The South African Blue Cranes. In words of my home language: Aaaag shame! Typically lazily humdrum South African. Score: big fat zero. Glue factory?
I understand making things showy for entertainment purposes, but this takes things to n entirely new level. The film plays into stereotypes that cheerleaders are rude, dumb, and only care about materialistic things, while perpetuating a culture where it's embarrassing to be a cheerleader. And, seeing as I've been a cheerleader for the past 8 years, and I plan on cheering competitively in college and working with UCA full-time, I can tell you with 100% certainty that I am not ashamed to be a cheerleader.
It also appears like they're trying to pull a Pitch Perfect. As in, they said phrases with "Aca" thrown in the beginning. NO ONE says "Fem-credible", "Cheer-fection," or "Cheer-smacked" in cheer. There are no virtual "world wide cheer-offs".
Again, I understand that the purpose of any movie franchise is to entertain! But there IS a line between entertainment and ridiculousness. None of the Bring it On movies have showcased legitimate cheerleading on any level whatsoever, they only play into the stigma/overall perception of cheerleading. At least with the first four, the plots were interesting, and they choreography somewhat RESEMBLED cheerleading. Unfortunately, the later two do not.
All I ask is if you're going to make a movie where the driving plot is about a cheer team, at least have it be CHEERLEADING. No loose, horrible motions, no showy dance-like moves. Have the team succeed with amazing stunts/tumbling yet maintain tight, clean motions and adhere to actual rules/guidelines. You can't advertise it as a cheer movie and have routines be literally 20% cheer, 80% whatever the heck the choreography is.
If a movie was produced about any other sport where the film's portrayal was so far off that the sport was hardly recognizable, it wouldn't be okay. But therein lies the issue: to the general public who know nothing about cheerleading, all of the girls are catty, self-obsessed idiots who only fight with each other and start virtual wars with one another when that is not the case whatsoever.
YES that is how awful this installment is. It's like they hired random people on the street to fill in as writer, director, choreographers, and actors. It was such a lazy put together movie that its embarrassing to even let the web know I watched it.
And to the reviewer Meghan just an FYI the whole "aca" thing was started in the first Bring It On, so its not like that's where they stole it, but more like Pitch Perfect got it from them.
Would love to see another bring it on movie. but maybe the old characters could get together and do something spesh..
Did you know
- TriviaThis is the first film in the 'Bring It On' series that does not begin with a nightmare sequence.
- GoofsAt around 37 minutes, Destiny is filming a selfie video diary while lying in bed. The shots alternate between over the shoulder as she films and the diary video directly. In the over the shoulder shots, her head is stationary even as she gestures and moves in the video.
- Quotes
Destiny: [cheer-conference] Are you guys gonna tell me what's going on, or do you expect me to guess?
Willow: What are we gonna do about being cheersmacked?
Destiny: [scoffs] Nothing. It was a prank. A practical joke. We can't take it seriously. People have probably already forgotten about it.
Roxanne: I don't think so.
Hannah: Mm-hmm. My IG followers are way down today. And people have always wanted my pics. I mean, especially since I've started taking butt selfies.
Destiny: Yeah, my followers were down too. But that happens, right?
Willow: No. It's because we're under a viral assault.
- ConnectionsFeatured in MsMojo: Top 10 Teen Movies That Feel Like a Fever Dream (2022)
- SoundtracksInvincible
(feat. Maxwell D)
Written by Michael John Wagner, Frank Fitzpatrick, and Ruwanga Samath
Performed by MJ Ultra
- How long is Bring It On: Worldwide #Cheersmack?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Bốc Lửa: Thách Thức Giải Thế Giới
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1