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  1. Feel the Beat: Directed by Elissa Down. With Sofia Carson, Pamela MacDonald, Sonia Laplante, Nayo. After failing to find success on Broadway, April returns to her hometown and reluctantly is recruited to train a misfit group of young dancers for a big competition.

    • (13K)
    • Comedy, Drama, Family
    • Elissa Down
    • 2020-06-19
  2. Feel the Beat is a cute fair family film. When big shot dancer April (Sofia Carlson) blows an audition that turns bad. She moves back home to a small town where she tries to teach and coach a bunch of young girls dancers. Soon enough, they make go on a competition tour. The plot is cute and charming.

  3. Jun 19, 2020 · This movie takes a while to get going, but once it does, it's at turns touching, sweet, funny, and fun. Feel the Beat works especially well as a movie that parents can enjoy with kids. Director Elissa Down struggles in the early scenes, relying on cliches, improbabilities, and oversimplifications to establish the grumpy, self absorbed character ...

    • Elissa Down
    • Barbara Shulgasser-Parker
    • Sofia Carson
  4. Jun 19, 2020 · A number of energetic dance routines elevate “Feel the Beat,” a predictable dramedy streaming on Netflix. The film hews to the formula of “The Bad News Bears,” following a self-absorbed ...

    • Natalia Winkelman
    • Elissa Down
  5. June 19, 2020. (2020-06-19) Running time. 107 minutes. Country. United States. Language. English. Feel the Beat is a 2020 American family dance comedy-drama film directed by Elissa Down, written by Michael Armbruster and Shawn Ku and starring Sofia Carson, Enrico Colantoni and Wolfgang Novogratz. [1][2]

  6. It's in these kids and their bond that the film's heart resides. But the cuteness isn't enough to make up for a run-of-the-mill storyline and a thin script. Far from feeling the beat, what you'll ...

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  8. www.pluggedin.com › movie-reviews › feel-the-beat-2020Feel the Beat - Plugged In

    Jun 19, 2020 · Netflix’s Feel the Beat is a predictable-but-sweet story about the value of self-worth, the need for selflessness and the beauty of family. While there are many positive lessons to be learned from this rare TV-G-rated flick, a few moments might also make parents wonder why the rating wasn’t bumped up a notch.

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