High Strung (2016 film)
High Strung | |
---|---|
Directed by | Michael Damian |
Written by | Janeen Damian Michael Damian |
Produced by | Janeen Damian Michael Damian |
Starring | Keenan Kampa Nicholas Galitzine Jane Seymour Sonoya Mizuno Richard Southgate Paul Freeman Maia Morgenstern |
Cinematography | Viorel Sergovici |
Edited by | Peter CabadaHagan Janeen Damian Michael Damian Byron Speight |
Music by | Nathan Lanier |
Production companies | Riviera Films Sforzando Productions Castel Film Studio |
Distributed by | Paladin |
Release date |
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Running time | 97 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $53,447[2] |
High Strung is a 2016 American drama film directed by Michael Damian and written by Janeen Damian and Michael Damian. The film stars Keenan Kampa, Nicholas Galitzine, Jane Seymour, Sonoya Mizuno, Richard Southgate and Paul Freeman. The film was released on April 8, 2016, by Paladin. A sequel High Strung: Free Dance was released in 2019.
Plot[]
Ruby is a classical ballet dancer who gets a scholarship to a Manhattan Conservatory of the Arts. She meets an edgy, British, moody young violinist named Johnnie who performs in the New York City Subway. While watching him play, two groups of hip hop dancers start a dance off, and Ruby gets pushed and she falls down. Johnnie gets distracted while helping her, and his violin and the rent money he has earned busking was stolen. He gets very upset, stating the violin was given to him by his grandfather, who he seemed to have been close with, since he had a tattoo of his grandfather's death date on his bicep. Later, she tries to help him with a loaner violin from the Conservatory, but he tells her he doesn't want charity and seems to be accusing her of being a rich, entitled snob because she attends the Conservatory, not knowing she's on scholarship. She learns he is illegally living in the USA, which is why he didn't report the theft to the police or ask them for help to retrieve his violin. She also learns that there is a competition where a dancer performs with a string musician, and the winner gets a scholarship, which could qualify Johnnie for a student visa, and earn him 25 grand. Ruby's scholarship is on the line because she is failing a mandatory contemporary dance class so she and Johnnie must find a way to save Ruby’s scholarship and keep Johnnie from being deported. Ruby's friend and roommate Jasmine "Jazzy" is also at risk of facing expulsion because she misses her classes while partying late night with her boyfriend and sleeping with him. The two have a struggle with friendship over Jazzy's situation, and Jazzy ends up calling Ruby "you bitch!" Jazzy realizes her mistake, and starts to improve her dancing and habits. Meanwhile, Johnnie had paid an immigration attorney to help him get a green card but the attorney turns out to be a fraud. The situation is made more complicated by the rivalry of some other students (April and Kyle) entering the competition, one of which has a particular jealousy of Johnnie's talent, Kyle Endeca. Meanwhile, Johnnie makes up with Ruby after going into a violin competition at a gala with Kyle earlier, and the two kiss, starting a relationship. With the help of a hip hop dance crew living a floor beneath Johnnie, they must find a common ground while preparing for a competition that could change their lives forever. Right before the competition, Johnnie is taken in by the police, and he can be forgiven for illegally living in America if he helps them find out the fraud attorney. Ruby and the hip hop group are about to start the competition without Johnnie since he hasn't shown up, but he finally does show up. The group performs their dance and music. The judges have mixed feelings about the non-classical dance, and when the group finishes, no one claps. Finally, the audience erupts into clapping and whooping. The judges announce Ruby and Johnnie's group the winner, and everyone is happy, except for the rival team.
Cast[]
- Keenan Kampa as Ruby, a ballet dancer who learns at the MCA; she is the friend of Jazzy and the girlfriend of Johnnie Blackwell; she doesn't enjoy contemporary
- Nicholas Galitzine as Johnnie Blackwell, a British violinist who is Ruby's boyfriend and dislikes Kyle Endeca; he was close to his grandfather
- Jane Seymour as Oksana, the MCA Contemporary dance teacher; she has a liking for April, and seems to dislike Ruby; later, she reveals Ruby is too good, and she wants to push Ruby
- Sonoya Mizuno as Jazzy, Ruby's roommate, fellow dancer, and friend who is in danger of expulsion from school since she misses so many classes because she drinks and parties late night with her mysterious boyfriend. She also ends up sleeping with him and is late for class. Her relationships are shaky with her friend Ruby
- Richard Southgate as Kyle, a violinist at MCA, a boy who crushes on Ruby and dislikes Johnnie, seeing him as competition violinist-wise and also for Ruby
- Paul Freeman as Kramrovsky, the ballet teacher at MCA who was in concentration camps when young, and teaches Ruby the lesson of perfection; how it should never be achieved because imperfection drives perseverance and talent
- Maia Morgenstern as Markova
- Ian Eastwood as Rik
- Anabel Kutay as April, the possible girlfriend of Kyle, a good contemporary dancer who dislikes Ruby and has a traditional "perfect mean girl" personality.
- Marcus Emanuel Mitchell as Hayward Jones III
- Comfort Fedoke as PopTart
- Simon A. Mendoza as Ollie
- Miranda Wilson as Mary
- Dave Scott as Macki
- Andrew Pleavin as Slater
- Tomi May as Detective Mullen
- David Lipper as Sam
- Nigel Barber as Mr. Peterson
Release[]
The film premiered at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival on February 6, 2016.[3] The film was released on April 8, 2016, by Paladin.[2]
Sequel[]
A sequel, High Strung Free Dance (also known as Free Dance), was released theatrically in October 2019,[4] and on Netflix on May 31, 2020.[5][6] Jane Seymour is the only cast member from High Strung to return for the sequel, which stars Harry Jarvis, Juliet Doherty, and Thomas Doherty.[7]
References[]
- ^ "'High Strung': Santa Barbara Review". Hollywood Reporter. 2016-02-15. Retrieved 2016-08-28.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "High Strung (2016) (2016)". Box Office Mojo. 2016-04-14. Retrieved 2016-08-28.
- ^ Amanda N'Duka (2016-01-12). "2016 Santa Barbara Film Festival Lineup Set". Deadline. Retrieved 2016-08-28.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ^ Dave McNary (June 12, 2019). "Film News Roundup: Gravitas Buys Seann William Scott Drama 'Already Gone'". Variety. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
GVN Releasing has set an Oct. 11 release for "High Strung: Free Dance," the sequel to the 2016 dance movie "High Strung."
- ^ John Delia (May 27, 2020). ""High Strung Free Dance" Comes to Netflix". ACED Magazine. Retrieved 2020-06-03.
- ^ Alexandria Ingham (May 30, 2020). "5 good movies to watch on Netflix this weekend: High Strung Free Dance and more". Fansided Netflix Life. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
- ^ John Defore (October 8, 2019). "'High Strung Free Dance': Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
External links[]
- 2016 films
- English-language films
- 2016 drama films
- American films
- American dance films
- American drama films
- Films directed by Michael Damian
- 2010s drama film stubs