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Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights film wikipedia article
Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights
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Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights
Dirty dancing havana nights.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Guy Ferland
Produced by
Lawrence Bender
Sarah Green
Screenplay by
Boaz Yakin
Victoria Arch
Story by
Kate Gunzinger
Peter Sagal
Starring
Romola Garai
Diego Luna
Sela Ward
John Slattery
Mika Boorem
Jonathan Jackson
Music by
Heitor Pereira
Cinematography
Anthony B. Richmond
Editing by
Luis Colina
Scott Richter
Studio
A Band Apart
Lawrence Bender Productions
Miramax Films
Artisan Entertainment
Havana Nights LLC
Distributed by
Lionsgate Films
Release date(s)
•February 27, 2004 (2004-02-27)
Running time
86 minutes[1]
Country
United States
Language
English
Budget
$25 million
Box office
$27,685,016
Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights is a 2004 American musical romance film directed by Guy Ferland. This film is a "re-imagining" of the 1987 blockbuster Dirty Dancing, reusing the same basic plot, but transplanting it from upstate New York to Cuba on the cusp of the Cuban Revolution.
Contents
[hide] •1 Plot
•2 Cast
•3 Production
•4 Reception
•5 Soundtrack
•6 References
•7 External links
Plot[edit]
Katey Miller (Romola Garai), her parents (Sela Ward and John Slattery), and her younger sister Susie (Mika Boorem) arrive in Cuba during the Cuban revolution. A self-described bookworm, Katey is not very happy about having to move to a different country during her senior year of high school, as she had been planning to attend Radcliffe College, although the rest of her family seem extremely pleased to be in Cuba. Meeting several other rich American teenagers down by the pool, including James Phelps (Jonathan Jackson), the son of her father's boss, Katey becomes disgusted when one of the teenagers insults a waiter when he accidentally knocks over some of their drinks. Katey attempts to talk to the waiter—Javier (Diego Luna), who works at the hotel to support his family—because she feels awful about what had occurred but he is not interested.
Katey watches a film of her mother and father dancing and wishes she could dance as well as they did. She and her father dance a bit. The next day in class, Katey is asked to read aloud from The Odyssey; it is a passage about love and passion. After class, James invites her to a party at the country club and she accepts.
While walking home from school she sees Javier dancing at a street party, and he offers to walk her home. They stop to listen to a street band and police show up, stopping Javier while Katey runs away.
The next day, Katey tries some of the dance moves she saw. Javier sees her and asks her to come see the real dancers Saturday night, but she says she is already going to the country club. Javier gets upset and leaves. Katey wears one of her maid's sexy dresses to the country club party and impresses James. Katey convinces him to take her to the Cuban club where Javier is dancing with the ladies. Javier dances with Katey while James sits at the bar. Soon he is accosted by Javier's brother, who tells him that they will eventually kick the Americans out of Cuba. Javier comes over and argues with his brother. James takes Katey back to the car and tries to seduce her, but she refuses, slaps him, and runs away. Katey goes back to the club and Javier agrees to walk her home.
The next day, Katey walks by a dance class. The teacher (Patrick Swayze) asks if anyone wants to enter the big dance contest and then dances with Katey for a bit. She grabs a flyer for the competition.
While walking to the pool, James apologizes to Katey and then tells her that Katey's sister saw Javier with her and got him fired. Katey argues with Susie and goes to find Javier. He is now working at a chop shop with his brother. She asks him to enter the dance contest with her, but he refuses. Meanwhile, it is becoming apparent that Javier's brother is helping the revolutionaries.
The next day, Javier shows up at Katey's school and agrees to enter the dance contest with her. They start teaching each other dance moves and Javier convinces her to "feel the music". They practice all the time, and Katey dances some more with the dance teacher, until it is the night of the dance. Katey and Javier dance with the other couples on the floor and are chosen to go on to the next round. Katey's parents, however, disapprove of her relationship with Javier but Katey reconciles with them. On the night of the contest's final round, while Katey and Javier are on the dance floor, Javier sees his brother and some revolutionaries disguised as waiters and the police soon try to arrest them. The contest stops as everyone flees the club, and Javier has to save his brother from the police. Javier and his brother talk about how they miss their dad, then they hear that Batista has fled the country and join the celebration.
Later, Javier comes to the hotel and finds Katey. He takes her to the beach and they make love. The next day, Katey's parents tell her they are leaving Cuba and she has one last night with Javier. They go to the Cuban club where they first danced, and the floor is theirs. Katey's family is there to see her and Katey narrates that she doesn't know when she will see Javier again, but this will not be their last time to dance together.
Cast[edit]
•Romola Garai as Katey Miller
•Diego Luna as Javier Suarez
•Sela Ward and John Slattery as Jeannie and Bert Miller, Katey and Susie's parents
•Mika Boorem as Susie Miller, Katey's sister
•Jonathan Jackson as James Phelps
•Rene Lavan as Carlos Suarez, Javier's brother
•Patrick Swayze as Dance Class Instructor
•January Jones as Eve
•Mýa as Lola Martinez
•Angélica Aragón as Mrs. Suarez
Production[edit]
Havana Nights is based on an original screenplay by playwright and NPR host Peter Sagal, based on the real life experience of producer JoAnn Jansen, who lived in Cuba as a 15 year old in 1958-59. Sagal wrote the screenplay, which he titled Cuba Mine, about a young American woman who witnessed the Cuban revolution and had a romance with a young Cuban revolutionary. The screenplay was to be a serious political romance story, documenting, among other stories, how the Cuban revolution transformed from idealism to terror. It was commissioned in 1992 by Lawrence Bender, who was rising to fame with his production of Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction. The screenplay was bought by a film studio, which requested several rewrites before deciding not to produce the film. A decade later, Bender decided to make a Dirty Dancing sequel, and the film was very loosely adapted from Sagal's script. Not a single line from Sagal's original screenplay appears in the final film and Sagal says that the only remnants of the political theme that existed in his script is a scene wherein some people are executed.[2]
Reception[edit]
Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights received generally negative reviews, mostly criticizing its attempt to remake from Dirty Dancing. On review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 23% ("rotten") rating, with the simple consensus "Cheesy, unnecessary remake."[3]
Soundtrack[edit]
Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights
Soundtrack album by Various Artists
Released
February 17, 2004
Genre
Pop / R&B
Label
J Records
1."Dance Like This" - Wyclef Jean featuring Claudette Ortiz
2."Dirty Dancing" - The Black Eyed Peas
3."Guajira (I Love U 2 Much)" - Yerba Buena
4."Can I Walk By" - Jazze Pha featuring Monica
5."Satellite (From "Havana Nights")" - Santana featuring Jorge Moreno
6."El Beso Del Final" - Christina Aguilera
7."Represent, Cuba" - Orishas featuring Heather Headley
8."Do You Only Wanna Dance" - Mýa
9."You Send Me" - Shawn Kane
10."El Estuche" - Aterciopelados
11."Do You Only Wanna Dance" - Julio Daivel Big Band (conducted by Cucco Peña)
12."Satellite (Spanish Version) Nave Espacial (From "Havana Nights")" - Santana featuring Jorge Moreno
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ "Title << British Board of Film Classification". British Board of Film Classification. 2004-03-16. Retrieved 2011-08-11.
2.Jump up ^ "Radio episode #383". This American Life. Air date June 19, 2009.
3.Jump up ^ Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights at Rotten Tomatoes
External links[edit]
•Official website
•Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights at the Internet Movie Database
•Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights at the TCM Movie Database
•Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights at AllRovi
•Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights at Box Office Mojo
•Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights at Rotten Tomatoes
[hide]
•v
•t
•e
Films directed by Guy Ferland
1990s
•The Babysitter (1995)
•Telling Lies in America (1997)
•Delivered (1999)
2000s
•Bang Bang You're Dead (2002)
•Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights (2004)
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Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dirty_Dancing:_Havana_Nights&oldid=572661118"
Categories: •2004 films
•English-language films
•2000s romantic drama films
•2000s musical films
•American films
•American coming-of-age films
•American dance films
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•American romantic musical films
•American teen romance films
•Films directed by Guy Ferland
•Films set in Havana
•Films set in the 1950s
•Films about race and ethnicity
•Sequel films
•A Band Apart films
•Artisan Entertainment films
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•Lions Gate Entertainment films
•Interracial romance films
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