Stomp the Yard Movie Review
Stomp the Yard Review

"Stomp the Yard" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Sylvain WhiteProducer : William Packer,Porter Versfelt III
Screenwiter : Robert Adetuyi,Gregory Ramon Anderson
Starring : Columbus Short,Meagan Good,Ne-Yo,Darrin Dewitt Henson,Brian J. White,Laz Alonso,Valarie Pettiford
On the television series Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, Columbus Short plays a
brooding, brilliant young television writer taken under wing by elder statesman
and comedian D.L. Hughley. It's not one of the show's most integral roles, but
Short plays it for broke, giving the writer's restrained wit just the right
glimmer of naiveté and confusion to escape two-dimensional branding. For his
first starring role in a feature film, Short plays a skilled krumper from L.A.
in Sylvain White's Stomp the Yard.
After teaching some lessons to a rival krumping gang on the battleground, DJ
(Short) witnesses the assault and murder of his brother (Chris Brown).
Posthaste, he makes his way to Atlanta and enrolls in a work-study program at
Truth University. It's here that DJ regains his love for dancing in the form of
stepping, a more formatted and coordinated dance style compared to DJ's loose
krumping. He quickly makes enemies with Grant (Darrin Dewitt Henson) by giving
eyes to April (Meagan Good), Grant's girlfriend. However, this leads to him
getting in good with the Thetas, the rival stepping gang to Grant's Gammas. As
luck would have it, DJ impresses his frat brothers and becomes a star in the
step team, winning further admiration from April and setting him up for a
step-off with Grant's crew.
Of all the weird sub-genres that could have turned into box-office gold,
there's a certain cultural niche that these dance competition films serve, but
it's not hefty enough. You Got Served was the golden goose, and sweet Jehovah,
it's laying eggs in every multiplex you can give your cold cash to. The dance
competition has become a national commune for the cinematic public, for one
reason or another; the unfathomable success of both You Got Served and Stomp
the Yard came from nowhere, yet in hindsight it's utterly obvious.
If dancing is the spectacle in these films, Stomp the Yard fails in simple
effectiveness. The dancing, on the few occasions that we actually see it, is
filmed with ferocity and urgency, but it doesn't deliver enough visual flair to
justify continued audience engagement. Beyond this, the film is formulaic, but
warmly receivable in its narrative ease. DJ will of course win the girl, find
his place at the school and the basic karmic alignments and adjustments will be
made. It goes so by the rules to the point that once can actually call the
training/return to form montage that DJ delivers in an emptied swimming pool.
If there is any sort of cultural relevance to be found in a movie like Stomp
the Yard, it's that spectacles don't even matter anymore: We just need the
possibility of a spectacle.
Taking "YMCA" to new heights.
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Review by Chris Cabin
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