Take the Lead | |
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Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Liz Friedlander |
Produced by | Christopher Godsick Michelle Grace Diane Nabatoff |
Written by | Dianne Houston |
Starring |
Antonio Banderas Alfre Woodard John Ortiz Rob Brown Yaya DaCosta Dante Basco Elijah Kelley Jenna Dewan |
Music by | Bonnie Greenberg Swizz Beatz |
Distributed by | New Line Cinema |
Release date
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April 7, 2006 |
Running time
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118 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $30 million |
Box office | $65.7 million |
Take the Lead (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) | ||
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Soundtrack album by Various Artists | ||
Released | March 28, 2006 | |
Recorded | 2005-2006 | |
Genre | Hip hop, R&B, dance | |
Length | 43:59 | |
Label | Republic/Universal | |
Producer | Various | |
Singles from Take the Lead | ||
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Take the Lead is a 2006 drama dance film directed by Liz Friedlander, and starring Antonio Banderas as dance instructor Pierre Dulaine, the founder of Dancing Classrooms. It also stars Alfre Woodard, John Ortiz, Rob Brown, Yaya DaCosta, Dante Basco, Elijah Kelley, and Jenna Dewan. The film was released on April 7, 2006. Although based in New York City, it was filmed in Toronto. Stock footage of various locations in New York City were used.
A group students prepare for a school dance. Rock arrives with a damaged ticket and is denied entry by Mr. Temple and Principal James. After leaving, Rock and a group of thugs proceed to vandalize the Principal's car. Pierre Dulaine catches them in the act, but they flee before Pierre is able to interrogate them further.
The next morning, Pierre arrives at the school to see the Principal. After explaining that he witnessed her car being vandalized, Pierre offers to take over the detention shift and teach them ballroom dancing. She agrees, although she is sure that he will not last more than a day. Pierre is led to the basement to meet the students. His first class is disastrous due to the scepticism and uncooperative personalities of the students. When Pierre returns the next morning, Principal James is surprised. She explains that Rock’s brother, Ray, was involved in a gang war; one of the casualties was LahRhette's brother, who refused to dance with Rock the day before.
At Pierre's dance studio, Caitlin is under pressure to learn to dance because her cotillion is fast approaching. Though she loves dancing, she feels like a failure. She envies Morgan for her graceful sensuality and says to Pierre that she is "like sex on hardwood." This gives Pierre an idea of how to reach out to the kids in detention. He invites Morgan to give them a demonstration of the tango, which inspires the students to be more willing to learn. Caitlin decides to join them for dance class and practices with Monster. Though the other students accuse her of wanting to "tell her upperclass friends that she's slumming" at first, they gradually learn to accept her after she admits that she feels better with them than with Morgan and her friends.