When 'Step Up' came out 10 years ago, critics compared Channing Tatum to Vanilla Ice
Step Up, the 2006 blockbuster starring Channing Tatum, is a movie made for 13-year-old girls with no cultural history. The plot is as old as film itself: Tatum’s Tyler, a “bad boy” from the wrong side of Baltimore who spends his days stealing cars and shooting hoops, gets caught by the police and is forced to do his community service in the Fine Arts High School. Surprise! Tyler is an excellent dancer and falls for a classically trained dancer from a higher social class (Jenna Dewan).
As a movie, Step Up is riddled with massive plot holes, almost completely separated from any recognizable reality, but surprisingly fun to watch. Unlike other Hollywood boy-meets-girl-dance-binds-them-together movies (cough, Flashdance), Dewan and Tatum—who met on set and later married—do their own dancing and are truly a joy to watch.
Despite playing the hunk-man in She’s the Man earlier in 2006, Step Up is really considered Channing Tatum’s breakthrough role. But when I looked back at some early reviews of Step Up—written on its release date 10 years ago today—critics weren’t exactly predicting Tatum’s eventual world takeover.
New York Times, August 2006
The biggest flaw of Step Up is that it requires you to suspend rational thought in order to buy into the standard Hollywood plot that it’s selling. For example, Tatum’s character is given community service in an arts high school, but then he is allowed to take place in a school-sanctioned project despite not being an enrolled student.
But as Jeannette Catsoulis wrote for the New York Times, there’s a reason this storyline comes back over and over again, and it is that teenage girls love hotties:
Ever since Kevin Bacon’s rebellious hips ignited a small-town uproar in Footloose, the modern high school romance has placed a premium on rhythm. In the typical scenario, a boy from the wrong side of the tracks woos a socially superior girl, his only assets a killer smile and a limber pelvis. The story is as old as Mickey Rooney but its appeal is eternal, and Step Up cleaves to the template with significantly more rigor than originality.
Variety, August 2006
The greatest strength of Step Up, as Joe Leydon noted for Variety, is its casting. Not only does Tatum play the hunk, but Dewan really works as the lead girl, and the movie cast R&B singer Mario as one of the talented teens in the high school. “The well-cast leads are more than appealing enough to encourage a rooting interest,” Leydon wrote. “Better still, they obviously do their own dancing, and do it very well.”
Unlike some critics, Leydon liked Tatum’s acting performance in Step Up:
As Tyler, Tatum (who, unfortunately, bears a slight resemblance to Vanilla Ice in some scenes) goes beyond traditional sensitive-hunkiness to convey streetwise humor and affecting shadings of pathos. Dewan is credible and creditable while running the gamut from steely determination to tremulous vulnerability.
…though he did compare America’s future heartthrob to Vanilla Ice.
USA Today, August 2006; Los Angeles Times, August 2006
Not everyone, though, was so impressed with Tatum and Dewan’s performances. Scott Bowles for USA Today claimed that the emotional center of the film (Tatum’s struggle to find himself and to find footing in a new life) missed the mark entirely.