Once in Las Vegas, they have to face off against not only the Grim Knights, but also the Mob, Sean’s ex-crew.
#All of the step up movies in order professional
As if on command, Moose puts his professional commitments and love life aside, and a montage sequence introduces the other one-trait dancers (some of whom, including Chadd Smith, Mari Koda and Martin Lombard, have appeared in previous films). When Sean hears about a contest called The Vortex, hosted by a slippery, Lady Gaga-esque pop star (Poland-born Izabella Miko, the lead of Save the Last Dance 2), he just has to get a new crew together and compete, especially since the prize is a three-year Las Vegas contract. PHOTOS The Best (and Worst) Dance Movies: From ‘Step Up’ to ‘Black Swan’ However, the stubborn Sean stays on in La-La Land, where he finds a job as a janitor at the dance hall of the immigrant grandparents of Moose ( Adam Sevani, on board since Step Up 2: The Streets), who’s now an engineer shacking up with Camille ( Alyson Stoner, from films one and three). Humiliated and 43 days behind on rent - possibly the film’s only realistically detailed touch - the Mobsters decide to go back to Florida.
#All of the step up movies in order movie
That said, the film could have been written by a dance movie plot generator, as it sees Sean ( Ryan Guzman) lose his crew from Step Up: Revolution, the Mob, in a supposedly devastating dance-off with Jasper ( Stephen “Stevo” Jones) and his Grim Knights, in an L.A. 8) - which, coincidentally, also was shot by Step Up All In cinematographer Brian Pearson, who is new to the series. 8, but this L.A.- and Las Vegas-set outing already has opened in several territories overseas, including France, where the franchise goes by the it-does-what-it-says-on-the-can moniker Sexy Dance.Ĭontinuing the somewhat odd tradition of working with a new screenwriter for each film, Step Up All Inwas written by newcomer John Swetnam, who penned the upcoming tornado epic Into the Storm (opening Aug. Almost cannibalistic in the way it seems to regurgitate not only the Fame and Save the Last Dance films, but also the previous Step Up films, this entirely vanilla dance celebration will do little to stop the series’ dwindling box-office returns stateside, though international success might keep it shimmying on for a little while longer.