Swing Kids

audience Reviews

, 97% Audience Score
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    Swing Kids, set in a PoW camp, tell the story of a few prisoners who join the team of Tap Dancers organized by a man of color. The movie strongly questions how Idealism and other factors that divide human beings just for the political and financial exploitation of the powerful. A pretty good watch with some music, dance, comedy and drama.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    This is a mash-up. But what an expansive list of things put together -- a prisoner of war camps in Korea, extraordinary tap dances, the power of art to heal and the horror of senseless killing and destruction born of lies and abstracted notions of what the world should be. Swing Kids shows what the world could be if art & love were given equal weight to guns and power politics. The pas de deux between 2 different characters at 2 points in the movie are extra-ordinary. Reviews that are not glowing must not like a movie that requires you to look below the surface to see a deeper sensibility. It is a powerful and important movie.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    beautiful, some parts a bit strange. DO NOT WATCH IF YOU DONT LIKE SAD ENDINGS !! VERY SAD ENDING
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    Fuck ideology! Good movie
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    funny and yet, makes you cry.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    Based on the Korean musical Roh Gi-soo, Swing Kids is a war drama filled with lots of tap dancing directed by Kang Hyeong-Cheol. It's the 1950's, the Korean War is raging on and we take a look inside the Geoje prison camp in South Korea, under command of the American army. The African-American Sergeant Jackson (Jared Grimes) gets constantly discriminated by caucasian soldier and feels less and less that he belongs here. What many also don't know is that he's a talented tap dancer who used to "Happy Feet" his way around Broadway. He's also of perfect use to the general, who wants him to create a dance group out of prisoners to show the public nothing is as bad as it seems. Auditions start not soon after, and although Jackson isn't that confident he will succeed in finding a group of talented individuals. The successful applicants are more or less discovered when he least expects is. The few individuals he brings together, consist of Yang Pan-rae (Park Hye-soo) who's been helping Jackson translating, Kang Byung-sam (Oh Jung-Se), a man who accidentally got imprisoned when looking for his wife, Chinese soldier Xiao Fang (Kim Min-Ho) surprises with his moves but has acute angina which makes him not as strong as he could've been. The other main character, who later also joins our group of dancers, is Roh Gi-soo (Do Kyung-soo), a man so loyal he never knows what to do to make his country and family proud, but loves to dance. Swing Kids shifts genres multiple times and succeeds. It's very different from Western cinema, where genres tend to stick to one thing and don't divert. Having recently watched Parasite (who might just end up being the best film I've seen in 2019), I think genre bending can be done if done in the right way with a proper vision and script. The film is heavily influenced by music, a high dose of tap dancing and often funny too. The dancing is impressive and I found myself tapping my feet multiple times throughout the film - it is that infectious. Kyung-soo and Grimes coming from a professional dance background, are perfectly cast in their roles. On the other hand, the story does go very dark - especially in the second half - when Korean prisoners fight back in order for freedom. The film gets a bit messier in the more action-filled scenes which are related to the raging war. I knew nothing about the film and I think that's for the better. It surprised me on multiple occasions, which is why I do recommend watching it, even just for the many talent you see on screen. Swing Kids taps its way into your heart. Review by Seth Eelen for novastreamnetwork.com Screened at KOFFIA (Korean Film Festival in Australia)
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    First time I saw it 14/07/2019 and to me, I enjoyed it. Because not only was it about Tap Dance for me, but about 5 different race of people and a war, that bought them all together for a brief moment, not as enemies, but as1human beings united, expressing themselves in who they are through the art of dance!!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    One of the less film that really touches my heart! The best dance movie in 2018!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    At first I thought maybe this movie is TOO long for the pace it seems to be going at..... but by gosh by the end I was crazed to think it ended.... If anything, I think the slow pace adds to the movies emotion by not only giving us more time to adore the characters so that the ending really makes its impact it also makes sense. War itself seems awfully drawn on, does it not? It just makes sense for the movie to be long and winding, and I was so absorbed I didn't even check how long I had left in the movie until it ended! The ending isn't where you expect it and it certainly isn't what you expect from it, but it is perfect. If you're a big crier like me, I recommend having a tissue or two ready for the end (though, with the ending I doubt you'll even be able to use them until the credits stop rolling and the screen goes black!).
  • Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    Apesar de alguns pequenos pontos, o filme é sim merecedor de atenção, ele entretêm o público e possui muitos aspectos interessantes, fazendo com que seja uma boa produção cinematográfica.