Mad Hot Ballroom Movie Review
Mad Hot Ballroom Review
"Mad Hot Ballroom" Overview

Rating: PG
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Marilyn AgreloProducer : Marilyn Agrelo,Amy Sewell
Screenwiter : Amy Sewell
Starring : Rodney Lopez,Yomaira Reynoso,Alex Tchassov,Victoria Malvagno,Jonathan Rodriguez,Tara Gallagher,Alyssa Polack,Terry Mintzer
The children-in-competition documentary is beginning to have enough examples to
deserve its own genre. From Hoop Dreams to Spellbound, documentary filmmakers
seem obsessed with the drive, determination, and borderline abuse that
surrounds these kids and their parents. Now that camera is turned on the most
grueling, cutthroat arena to which children have ever been subjected: ballroom
dance. Actually, Mad Hot Ballroom is a charming tale about adding a little
class to the lives of New York City public schoolchildren.
The film follows three teams, each representing public schools from different
boroughs. The fourth and fifth graders on each team learn five dances: the
foxtrot, meringue, tango, rumba, and swing. Their teachers try to instill
presentation from day one. Little things like posture and tucking in your
shirt. Over the course of ten weeks they train and compete to be the one school
out of 60 to win the Challenge Trophy at the Colors of the Rainbow Finals in
Manhattan.
The film’s most interesting scenes come not on the dance floor, however, but on
the streets and in the homes of these children as they talk about their lives.
They chat about dance, of course, but mostly they talk about what it’s like to
be a kid: what boys they like, what girls they like, their future, their
parents, and trying to grow up clean in a crooked neighborhood. They also cover
the gamut from architecture to gay marriage.
The film also touches on the various benefits the program has for the children.
They learn about different cultures; each dance comes from a different part of
the world. They acquire skills usually reserved for their middle class
counterparts. It seems to have an impact on some students who stop showing up
in the principal’s office after taking the class. Instructors like Rodney Lopez
become like father figures, showing the children, especially the boys, that it’
s okay to express their artistic impulses. The “dance: my anti-drug” message
comes through without a lot of browbeating.
Visually, however, the film is not very impressive. The video seems a little
flat, and with the exception of one very clever edit, not much cinematic effort
is made to engage the audience. That’s left to the kids who, for the most part,
are up to the task. But after a while seeing the same dances – even with
improvement and upped antes – gets a little tiresome.
Somehow, the film also lacks the tension that marks a movie like Spellbound,
where we become so wrapped up in the kids’ lives that each word becomes a time
bomb. Here, the competitions are important, but we achieve a pleasant smile
when the outcome is good and maybe an “aww” when they fail.
Agrelo makes some unpredictable choices, like showing us the meeting of the
teacher’s council that discusses the competition. When it’s over, they throw
down and dance themselves, a testament to how much they love what they do. We’
re also shown the aftermath of defeat, as the movie continues to follow one
team even after they lose a key competition.
Probably the most inspiring moments come when we see the impact of the training
on the children’s lives. Not just in competition, where a flourish taught by
one teacher shows up with effortless grace, but in their daily lives. On the
playground, with anything in the world to do, a few of the children actually
start practicing, mimicking their teacher’s “five, six, seven, eight…”
count-off. Mad Hot Ballroom shows us that given the chance, some kids really do
just want to have good, clean fun.
Reviewed at the 2005 Philadelphia Film Festival.
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Review by David Thomas
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