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IMDbPro

How She Move

  • 2007
  • PG-13
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
3.6/10
6.8K
YOUR RATING
Tre Armstrong in How She Move (2007)
Home Video Trailer from Paramount Vantage
Play trailer2:21
23 Videos
56 Photos
Drama

Following her sister's death from drug addiction, a high school student is forced to leave her private school to return to her old, crime-filled neighborhood where she re-kindles an unlikely... Read allFollowing her sister's death from drug addiction, a high school student is forced to leave her private school to return to her old, crime-filled neighborhood where she re-kindles an unlikely passion for the competitive world of step dancing.Following her sister's death from drug addiction, a high school student is forced to leave her private school to return to her old, crime-filled neighborhood where she re-kindles an unlikely passion for the competitive world of step dancing.

  • Director
    • Ian Iqbal Rashid
  • Writer
    • Annmarie Morais
  • Stars
    • Rutina Wesley
    • Tre Armstrong
    • Brennan Gademans
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.6/10
    6.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ian Iqbal Rashid
    • Writer
      • Annmarie Morais
    • Stars
      • Rutina Wesley
      • Tre Armstrong
      • Brennan Gademans
    • 19User reviews
    • 59Critic reviews
    • 63Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos23

    How She Move
    Trailer 2:21
    How She Move
    How She Move
    Clip 1:13
    How She Move
    How She Move
    Clip 1:13
    How She Move
    How She Move
    Clip 0:38
    How She Move
    How She Move
    Clip 1:22
    How She Move
    How She Move
    Clip 0:38
    How She Move
    How She Move
    Clip 1:04
    How She Move

    Photos56

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    Top cast84

    Edit
    Rutina Wesley
    Rutina Wesley
    • Raya Green
    Tre Armstrong
    Tre Armstrong
    • Michelle
    • (as Tré Armstrong)
    Brennan Gademans
    Brennan Gademans
    • Quake
    Boyd Banks
    Boyd Banks
    • Mike Evans
    Clé Bennett
    Clé Bennett
    • Garvey
    Ardon Bess
    • Uncle Cecil
    Conrad Coates
    Conrad Coates
    • David Green
    Keyshia Cole
    Keyshia Cole
    • Keyshia Cole
    Eve Crawford
    • Seaton Teacher
    DeRay Davis
    DeRay Davis
    • DeRay Davis
    Shawn Fernandez
    Shawn Fernandez
    • Trey
    • (as Shawn Desman)
    Nina Dobrev
    Nina Dobrev
    • Tall Girl in Bathroom
    Kevin Duhaney
    Kevin Duhaney
    • E.C.
    Ingrid Gaynor
    • Pam Green
    Balford Gordon
    Balford Gordon
    • Neighbourhood Guy
    Patrick Haye
    Patrick Haye
    • Customer
    Malvin Jacobs
    • Scrawny Guy
    Rogue Johnston
    • DJ
    • Director
      • Ian Iqbal Rashid
    • Writer
      • Annmarie Morais
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    3.66.8K
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    Featured reviews

    4Buddy-51

    Bland beyond belief

    "How She Moves" springs to life only when its high-energy, talented cast members are kicking up their heels and strutting their stuff for the camera. Otherwise, this stale strive-suffer-and-succeed story is low on energy, low on originality, and low on anything that might make the movie stand out from the dozens of other, likeminded films that have come before it.

    Rutina Wesley has modest appeal as the academically gifted inner-city youngster who finds that the best way to raise her private school tuition money is by entering step-dance competitions, but both she and her fellow actors are poorly served by uninspired screen writing and undistinguished direction. As noted earlier, the movie achieves some spark when the performers are up on stage dancing, but such moments are far too few and sadly fleeting.
    7newatt-2

    This movie is better than average dance movie

    I watch them all.

    It's not better than the amazing ones (_Strictly Ballroom_, _Shall we dance?_ (Japanese version), but it's completely respectable and pleasingly different in parts.

    I am an English teacher and I find some of the ignorance about language in some of these reviews rather upsetting. For example: the "name should scream don't watch. 'How she move.' Since when can movie titles ignore grammar?"

    There is nothing inherently incorrect about Caribbean English grammar. It's just not Canadian standard English grammar. Comments about the dialogue seem off to me. I put on the subtitles because I'm a Canadian standard English speaker, so I just AUTOMATICALLY assumed that I would have trouble understanding all of it. It wasn't all that difficult and it gave a distinctly different flavour as the other step movies I have seen were so American.

    I loved that this movie was set in Toronto and, in fact, wish it was even more clearly set there. I loved that the heroine was so atypically cast. I enjoyed the stepping routines. I liked the driven Mum character. I felt that many of the issues in the movie were addressed more subtly than is characteristic of dance movies.

    In summary, if you tend to like dance movies, then this is a decent one. If you have superiority issues about the grammar of the English standard you grew up speaking, your narrow mind may have difficulty enjoying this movie.
    7rgcustomer

    Shockingly underrated on IMDb

    This film is shockingly underrated on IMDb. Like so many films, this isn't Shawshank. But it's a reasonably good, if predictable, dance competition / personal growth film. If you want to spend an hour and a half watching a sort of 8 Mile for a female step dancer, than I think you'll like it.

    Judging from the IMDb ratings, my guess is that this movie was approaching the top 250, and was "vote bombed" with many 1s, as happens to so many films that aren't about the mob, don't have special effects, or include non-white or non-straight characters.

    It's an American film, but it's not a US film. Set mostly in Toronto the cues are subtle, and some audiences may think it's set entirely in the US just because the final competition is in the border city of Detroit.

    I liked the music. I liked the dance (but not convinced it's worth $50,000 ... but what do I know). The characters were easy on the eyes.

    I do agree the title sucks. I don't remember anyone in the film saying those words, and it should have an "s". (No, it's not a foreign language).

    There's not a lot to hate about this film (and let's be honest, a vote of 1 means you hated it) so I can only assume that it's an expression of hate for the kind of people in it, and that's sad.
    5sherlock-CC

    young

    Although some plot settings are not reasonable, the loopholes in the plot are forgivable. The key thing people want to see is the hot dance scenes. Overall, the tone of the film is pleasant, and still tells a traditional story about personal struggle, interspersed by wonderful and eye-catching dances
    6colinbarnard-1

    Your Entertainment- MY Tax Dollars at Work!

    This film represents every aspiring Canadian performance artist's dream- the chance to be noticed in the United States. To facilitate this ambition, all levels of Canadian Government funnel huge amounts of money to Canadian talent so that they can create vehicles to hock their wares south of the border. Nevermind that the work itself seldom represents the land or the people it comes from.

    "How She Move" is a curious creature, a Canadian film that actually doesn't try to be set in America, or be about Americans. Notice my choice of words, though- it is an absence of a negative, not an outright positive. Even though Brooklin and Baltimore are mentioned directly by name, and a large section of the film is set (though not filmed) in Detroit, the only references to Canada are oblique: "T-Dot" "Scarborough" and "Jane Street Junta". Too bad the average American film-goer has no idea what those terms mean.

    Even the one shot of Canadian money is the backside of our $20.00 bill, the one Canadian banknote that is the same colour as the US Greenback.

    The settings are generic North American urban ghetto, with the high irony of the actual Jane-Finch corridor exterior shots not being gritty enough to pretend they have street cred, so the film crew travels to Hamilton Ontario to ramp up the film's "ghettoness". Not one exterior establishing shot to proudly proclaim "This is Canada".

    At least the interior shots of the characters homes are authentic and ring true to some tenements in the Jane-Finch area.

    The film even downplays the Caribbean origins of most of the characters, but not to any degree that it downplays its Canadian-ness. But, "downplay" is not "ignore" and there are many subtle references that only someone familiar with the Caribbean colony in Toronto would understand. And I use the phrase "Caribbean Colony" with deliberate purpose.

    The story itself is generic to many American films of the same ilk. It is still a valid story, in a sense, since various methods of uplift have always been aspirations of marginalized communities. It is as true in Toronto as any other city in North America.

    And the story is told with uncommon passion and integrity, from the characters' and actors' levels.

    What really shines in this film is the showcase of Toronto talent. To be sure, all this talent would love to kiss Canada goodbye for a lucrative career in the U.S., but they grew up here, and here is where they are currently shining! That too is part of Canadian culture, but no American would understand that.

    To my American friends, I mean no slight- I personally think you are big enough to embrace a true Canadian story if it has the production values that you are used to in your cinema. The mavens in Hollywood are so conservative though that you continue to get spoon-fed pap, and only rarely are you served true art with a degree of risk attached. When films have to make back a $150 Million budget, the owners of that money tend to be risk adverse! This film is getting a wide release in the United States. MTV Films has had a hand in it's financing or distribution, hence the reason why its Canadian-ness is being downplayed. But, in 2008, this is the best Canada can do in bringing its stories to you...by making them seem like YOUR stories.

    What a timid little country Canada is! Couldn't any of my tax money put one Canadian flag in a scene? A real TTC bus? A shot of CW Jefferies Collegiate? A Jane Street or Driftwood Avenue street sign? How much risk is there in that?

    Best Emmys Moments

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The movie originally had a scene set at the Canadian/U.S. border where the Canadian protagonists cross the border in order to get to the climatic dance contest in Detroit. However, this scene was cut out after a test screening because it confused many people in the test audience who had assumed up to that point that the movie was about American characters doing their thing in the United States.
    • Goofs
      The math teacher asks two students to solve a quadratic equation using the quadratic form. However the equation, x^2-4x+6=0 has no real solutions. Unless the class is studying complex numbers, the question is impossible.
    • Quotes

      Raya Green: It's funny, isn't it? How one moment can change a million after it.

    • Connections
      Featured in MsMojo: Top 10 Dance Movies of the 2000s (2020)
    • Soundtracks
      Out Here
      Performed by Mayhem Morearty

      Written by Kevin Williams and Andrew Franklin (SOCAN)

      Published by Kevin Williams and Andrew Franklin

      Courtesy of Mosaic Music

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    FAQ18

    • How long is How She Move?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 25, 2008 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Canada
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ritmos del barrio
    • Filming locations
      • Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Sienna Films
      • Celluloid Dreams
      • MTV Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $7,070,641
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $3,957,471
      • Jan 27, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $8,659,212
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • SDDS
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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