Cuban Fury

Cuban Fury

2014 "All's fair in Love & Salsa"
Cuban Fury
Cuban Fury

Cuban Fury

6.2 | 1h38m | R | en | Comedy

Beneath Bruce Garrett's under-confident, overweight exterior, the passionate heart of a salsa king lies dormant. Now, one woman is about to reignite his Latin fire.

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6.2 | 1h38m | R | en | Comedy , Romance | More Info
Released: April. 11,2014 | Released Producted By: Big Talk Studios , Film4 Productions Country: United Kingdom Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Beneath Bruce Garrett's under-confident, overweight exterior, the passionate heart of a salsa king lies dormant. Now, one woman is about to reignite his Latin fire.

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Cast

Nick Frost , Chris O'Dowd , Olivia Colman

Director

Andrea Matheson

Producted By

Big Talk Studios , Film4 Productions

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Reviews

Phoenixphire81 A nice little film that is chock full of heart (or of course 'El Corazón') Nick frost has a geeky charm that means you really can't help but like him whatever he's in. He does well to carry this film as the central character and is helped along by a strong supporting cast. Everyone nails their respective roles, particularly Chris O'Dowd who really is a loathsome creep throughout. It seems weird to see Frost without Pegg as they are so interlinked in our minds (but there is a lovely redeeming shot to make us all feel at ease once again). The dancing and music is fantastic and massive credit to Nick Frost for his skills on the dance floor. My favourite scene by far is a fantastic satirical dance off between frost and O'Dowd to 'win the girl'. This is just brilliant and these two pull it of perfectly. Fun film, good acting, plenty of feel good vibes.
SnoopyStyle Bruce and his sister Sam danced salsa competitively as kids under the directions of Ron Parfitt (Ian McShane). They were a winning team until Bruce fails to attend the Nationals after being bullied in his costume. He vows never to dance again. Twenty five years later, Bruce Garrett (Nick Frost) is a chubby engineer. His 'friend' Drew (Chris O'Dowd) is a sleazy co-worker. Helen (Alexandra Roach) is a bitter co-worker. They get a new boss in Julia (Rashida Jones) and Bruce immediately falls for her. He discovers that she dances salsa and he tries to put on his dancing shoes once again.Nick Frost is likable. Chris O'Dowd is a silly fun weasel, and Rashida Jones is absolutely adorable. The movie works whenever these three interact with each other. The awkward romance between Frost and Jones is endearing. The dancing doesn't make sense. I don't understand why Bruce doesn't simply join in the dance class as a beginner. The premise doesn't work and the story suffers. The comedy works but the dancing story doesn't.
secondtake Cuban Fury (2014)A total feel good dance and music movie. And so familiar it really does just ride on the formula. Expect nothing more—and enjoy the salsa! It's curious that a leading actor in this movie, Irish actor Chris O'Dowd, also appears in a simliar feel good up from nowhere music flick, "The Sapphires," and yet here has an opposite personality. He plays an unlikeable boss here, and his excessive one-liners don't actually come off as funny.The real lead is Nick Frost, playing Bruce, a once promising salsa dancer who as a kid got ridiculed to the point of quitting. But now, as an adult looking for a girl in his life, he finds he needs to start again. He's funny and lovable, though also not as funny as he is meant to be. The woman in question is an American, Rashida Jones, who is really at ease and lovable on screen even if she plays a kind of obvious role. She helps ground what is a very lightweight and flimsy production. So then the usual competition between types of men occurs. There are clichés, there are the ever-useful plot twists and surprises that won't surprise you because they're so old, and then there's the dance competition. And you know, more or less, what happens. All in pure sweet happiness.Oddly enough, this mediocre movie is still fun to watch, so go ahead. The music is fun, and some of the dance venues are really great. And the story really does make you feel good.
Steve Pulaski Despite an unconventional premise, two charming leads, and a focus on a subject scarcely depicted in film, there is shockingly little to say about James Griffiths' Cuban Fury other than there is little funny about the story and its characters and there is not too much that is interesting either. What could be a satire, both mocking and embracing Spanish culture, particularly the dance known as the Salsa, the film seems to have too much love for the dance to dare say anything remotely satirical about it, and the descent into sappy, heartfelt storytelling in the third act happens way too fast and disrupts the film's tone, which was already barely scraping by as a piece of afternoon fluff.The film stars Nick Frost, most famous from Edgar Wright's "Cornetto" trilogy, which also featured the comedic talents of Simon Pegg, who makes a brief but memorable cameo in Cuban Fury. Frost plays Bruce Garrett, a once-teen salsa champion who now wastes away, an unfulfilled louse who was cruelly beaten by a gaggle of bullies for exercising his passion for dance. His passion, however, is reinvigorated once he meets his attractive new boss Julia (Rashida Jones), who loves dancing, particularly the salsa, and in order to win her over, Bruce must work to master all of his traits that he thought he lost. The only thing standing in his way is his sly, manipulative coworker Drew (Chris O'Dowd of The IT Crowd and The Sapphires fame), who is also trying to win over Julia through techniques involving insincerity and cunning actions.Right off the bat, we have three talents at the center of this film who have proved to do strong work in the past few years; what we don't have, however, is a script that is interesting enough to maintain a story about salsa for over ninety minutes and what we don't have is a script that is funny enough to keep its main subject afloat. Salsa is one of those subjects that is almost asking to be satirized with an unconventional sense of humor, but the fact that writer Jon Brown seems to respect it too much to really make fun of it means the only other route Cuban Fury can take besides the route of satire is the route of seriousness, which, for something like this, isn't all that interesting.And with that, Cuban Fury dissolves into a story that becomes about centered on the one man trying to one-up the other, and eventually into sappiness by the film's conclusion, which already throws off the kind of energy and force Frost and O'Dowd are known to generate on-site. Neither man is bad here, and neither is Jones, who, despite really lacking a core character outside of being a love interest, still gets by because her character is so sweet and loving. The real issue lies that Frost and O'Dowd aren't given much to do together that is memorable in a comedic sense; they kind of wade in the water, hoping their talents will be effectively used in the film but that moment never comes and we're left with a shell of a film.Cuban Fury, similar to another project Frost did, alongside Simon Pegg, seems to need the directorial and writing care provided by Edgar Wright, who has collaborated with Frost and Pegg, as I said, three times before. I've never quite seen the case where an actor deviating from a director/writer's project causes him to make lesser films, but it has been prevalent in the case of Pegg and Frost, who are funny men, when given the right lines, but seemingly need the guidance of a man who can blend humor with absurdity and drama. Wright did it with Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz, and The World's End, and it seems Griffiths and Brown could've benefited from his techniques.Starring: Nick Frost, Chris O'Dowd, and Rashida Jones. Directed by: James Griffiths.