Cuban Fury 2014 torrent:
1987: A 13-year-old born dancer with fire in his heels and snakes in his hips working alone to explode in the UK Junior Football Championship. But then, a strange incident of bullying mean streets of London robs his trust, and our young hero finds his life redirected to a different path. The fact is that 22 years later, Elder Bruce Garrett (Nick Frost) is out of shape and side – trapped in a downward spiral of self-pity, repression and Nandos take outs. Only Julia (Rashida Jones), his smart, funny, gorgeous new American boss gives him a reason to live. But, shes untouchable. From his league, he said, with his perfect smile and perfect life. Unknown to Bruce however, Julia has problems all its own. Luckily for him, she also has a secret passion. Then theres Drew (Chris ODowd), alpha male colleague and office horny king-monkey. Drew makes no secret of his desire to get (his words), all within the Julia …
Review :
A pleasant inoffensive comedy with Nick Frost for once divorced from Simon Pegg and wooing Parks and Recreations Rashida Lloyd against the nefarious designs of his crude office manager Chris ODowd. Turning on the coincidence that Lloyd is an avid salsa dance fan and student while Frost gave up an early flair for the same dance under peer pressure from his fellow school-mates, they unsurprisingly get together and take the film to a predictable dance-off conclusion.The film aims for the same good-time vibe of popular hits like Dirty Dancing and Strictly Ballroom, mixed with the earthier feel of earlier Frost vehicles like Hot Fuzz and Shawn of the Dead and if it doesnt quite pull it off, it gets by with some amusing situations, funny lines and likable characters.I probably liked more the supporting parts of the effete Latino male dancer, Frosts supportive sister, played by an underused Olivia Colman, a permatanned Ian McShane as Frosts old tyrannical dance-teacher and Frosts two saddo mates who get together once a week purely to review how ordinary their intervening days have been. As is the norm in contemporary comedies, the humour is a bit off-colour, with some of ODowds conceited caveman comments being a little over the mark, but it reins itself in for the sequin-spectacular finale and feel-good conclusion.Frost is fine, if a little unbelievable, as his born-to-dance character, Lloyd is inoffensive in a fairly shallow role while ODowd garners a fair share of the laughs with his characters crude, boorish behaviour.Nicely shot and edited, particularly in the fast and furious dance where youll believe a fat man can fly, Cuban Fury is affable, lightweight entertainment worth partnering for 90 minutes.