Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights

Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights (2004)

Break the rules. Find your freedom. Live your life.

27/02/2004

#Romance#Drama

Overview

In pre-revolution Cuba, Katey Miller is about to defy everyone's expectations. Instead of a parent-approved suitor, Katey is drawn to the sexy waiter, Javier, who spends his nights dancing in Havana's nightclubs. As she secretly learns to dance with Javier, she learns the meanings of love, sensuality and independence.

Status: Released

Rating: 64%

Original language: EN

Budget: $25,000,000

Revenue: $27,685,016

Official website:

Details

Production Companies

Lions Gate Films

Lions Gate Films

Miramax

Miramax

Lawrence Bender Productions

Lawrence Bender Productions

Havana Nights LLC

Havana Nights LLC

Artisan Entertainment

Artisan Entertainment

Social Network

IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0338096

Wikipedia: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q259807

Facebook: No data

Instagram: No data

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Cast

Reviews (2)

Review by: Andre Gonzales

Written by: Andre Gonzales on 2023-07-03T23:52:05.019Z

I liked the dancing and was surprised that Patrick was in this but that's about it. The storyline was dumb and they didn't even finish there routine for the contest. So it was a pretty pointless movie.

Review by: r96sk

Written by: r96sk on 2024-01-29T01:47:59.141Z

'Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights' is surprisingly watchable.

I was expecting a rather tame and boring return to the world of 'Dirty Dancing', though it actually produces a fine dance romance flick. Of course compared to the excellent and far superior original it is a downgrade, but for what it is I had a decent time watching.

Romola Garai and Diego Luna have solid enough chemistry onscreen, while John Slattery offers firm support. Sela Ward is alright, not helped by how the makers chose to portray her character - Jeannie becomes quite irredeemable at one point, with the film's attempts to 'fix' that totally failing to convince. That's about it for cast positives, though it was neat to see a familiar face from the 1987 flick appear.

The dance and Cuban revolution parts of the story don't mesh amazingly, a bit forced perhaps, but all in all I'd say they just narrowly made it work. I will say the dancing numbers and soundtrack aren't as good as they could've/should've been, yet I did still appreciate a few bits of music: the intro piece and the use of Wyclef Jean's 'Dance Like This', I never knew until now that that latter track was the original of Shakira's 'Hips Don't Lie' - you learn something new every day!

Videos

Backdrops

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Posters

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