This movie was made in Cape Town. There is not one South African accent in the whole movie. Even the street thugs speak with an American accent.
Honey 3: Dare to Dance
2016
Action / Drama / Family / Music / Romance
Honey 3: Dare to Dance
2016
Action / Drama / Family / Music / Romance
Plot summary
While attending college in Cape Town, Melea Martin feels constrained by the school's strict policies, and decides to set out on her own. Searching for a way to use her talents as a dancer and inspire the community around her, Melea rents a failing theater in order to put on a Hip-Hop Romeo and Juliet performance. But much like the Capulets and Montagues, conflicts between cast members threaten to bring the whole performance to a halt...
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
September 07, 2016 at 06:07 PM
Director
Movie Reviews
Poor quality. Not genuine Africana.
Just interesting
It's a cheap replica of Step Up. It doesn't make you feel the energy of dancing, as it should be doing. Movies that involve dancing have to keep the audience engaged all the time and not let them fall into boredom, as this one is doing. And because you not only have to deal with dance, you also have music, which is another key that this movie didn't got it right. People should vibrate and resonate with the emotions shared through music and dancing, but this one just keeps selling us "corny" talks. What a shame.
I simply wasted my time and money on this movie.
This has to be the worst movie I have ever watched in terms of
story-line and casting. It infuriated me so much that I just had to
write this review whereas I have never seen the need of doing one
before.
The story-line is such a cliché! What was unique apart from the Romeo
and Juliet drift?? What dance moves were different whereas this is a
movie released in 2017? All the step-up movies beat this movie hands
down.
Secondly, I know this will make me sound biased but how is the movie
based in Africa and the main cast is full of Americans? Never have I
ever heard of Americans studying in Africa in all those numbers, maybe
just one-off cases of student exchange programs but not an entire
30-squad dance crew.
Africa is full of amazing dancers and our African music is just as
amazing. This would have been the movie's selling and unique point.
Incorporating African music and dances is what would have made this
dance movie different from the rest.
Next time you shoot and produce a movie in Africa, duly note that there
is mad talent here and we want our stories told as a representation of
who we are and not false representation of us being the same as
Westerners.
I'm out. Stay Woke!