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| Step Up 2:The StreetsA step ahead of the rest February 20,
 2008 1:08:00 PM 
For a sequel to a movie that was a shameless redux of all dance romances before it, Step Up 2 is a step ahead of the rest. True, the acting is flimsy, but it has humor, plenty of energetic dance numbers, and enough oddball characters to shore up the predictable arc. Andie (Briana Evigan) rolls with the 4-1-0, an inner-city dance troupe that pulls “pranks” by performing on a crowded subway during rush hour. (If you ride the Red Line, you’ve seen Boston’s version.) She gets a chance to attend an elite Baltimore arts school (same one from the original), and the two sides of her life collide. Not a bad deal as it turns out, as she has two hunky studs (Black Thomas and Robert Hoffman), one in each milieu. The ambiguous commentary on race and class takes second billing once director Jon Chu lights up the back-alley sets and lets the dancers loose. 98 minutes | Boston Common + Fenway + Fresh Pond + Chestnut Hill + suburbs
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												Strange but slickly done 
												Another Martin Lawrence shtick 
												A chilling gangland epic 
												A grand idea 
												A rich kid on the road to comeuppance 
												Ever shirtless, ever silly 
												Oodles of fun 
												Inadvertent camp 
												No pulse
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 | More gripping than highlight reelsNot scary and a measly PG-13Predictable, pointless, and sadRepackaged stereotypesEveryone calls you "dude"Cold feet and NikesStrange but slickly doneA novel transformationThe Narragansetts’ Stories in StoneClever, clever conceit
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