Robin and her father have a car accident. Her father dies. Robin is badly injured and cannot compete in gymnastics tournaments anymore. She lives with her mother and bad step-father. Robin is accepted to the school athlethics team but is not accepted by some other girls, so she works out at a friends house. Eventually Robin and her team compete in the national scholastic meet.
Robin Crew
Tommy
Jean Stoller
Carly Simmons
Jack Crew
Roy Teler
Fred Stoner
**_âFlashdanceâ meets âKarate Kidâ with Olivia d'Abo and Keanu Reeves_** In Buffalo, a former gymnast teen (d'Abo) seeks to get back on the team after recovering from an accident. Will she rise up like a phoenix from the ashes to participate in the regional gymnastics competition in Niagara Falls? Reeves plays her potential beau while Rita Tushingham is on hand as the coach. Shot in autumn, 1984, but not released until 1986, "Teenage Dreamâ was originally called âFlying,â but is also known as âDream to Believeâ (which was the title card of the version I saw). Itâs a knockoff of âFlashdanceâ (1983) albeit with the teenage milieu of âKarate Kidâ (1984). The parallels to âFlashdanceâ are pretty glaring: Instead of being concerned about auditioning for a dance school, the protagonist is concerned about making the school team. Instead of riding a bicycle, she rides a moped. Instead of living in a âhipâ warehouse apartment, she trains at a cool carpet warehouse. Instead of a wealthy beau, she has a rich best friend. Instead of her ballet teacher pal passing away, someone else close dies. I had a bad attitude about this flick when I first started watching since the dubious version I viewed (from Youtube) had washed out colors, obviously taken from a VHS. However, the story & characters pulled me in enough to enjoy the movie. No, itâs not as good as âFlashdanceâ nor great like âKarate Kid,â but if youâre in the mood for an 80âs flick in the mold of âDirty Dancingâ itâs likable and fills the bill just fine despite its predictableness and a few eye-rolling bits. You canât beat the Niagara Falls area locations. I was interested in the movie because I was curious to see the two stars when they were so young, but also because Iâm familiar with a few of director Paul Lynchâs other filmsâspecifically âProm Nightâ (1980), âHumongousâ (1982) and âBulliesâ (1986)âand I wanted to see how heâd do in a different genre. Quite good, actually. While d'Abo is a highlight on the female front, so is brunette Nicole Kolman, who plays the âhotâ stepsister with several possible boyfriends. Kolman only appeared in two films, this one and the similar âBody Movesâ (1990). Meanwhile Jessica Steen is notable as best friend, Carla. I canât close without mentioning the coachâs hideous red mullet, which I hoped had gone out of style with Mrs. Brady a full decade earlier. The film runs 1 hour, 36 minutes (full version), and was shot in Toronto and Niagara Falls. GRADE: B-
Robin Crew
Tommy
Jean Stoller
Carly Simmons
Jack Crew
Roy Teler
Fred Stoner
**_âFlashdanceâ meets âKarate Kidâ with Olivia d'Abo and Keanu Reeves_** In Buffalo, a former gymnast teen (d'Abo) seeks to get back on the team after recovering from an accident. Will she rise up like a phoenix from the ashes to participate in the regional gymnastics competition in Niagara Falls? Reeves plays her potential beau while Rita Tushingham is on hand as the coach. Shot in autumn, 1984, but not released until 1986, "Teenage Dreamâ was originally called âFlying,â but is also known as âDream to Believeâ (which was the title card of the version I saw). Itâs a knockoff of âFlashdanceâ (1983) albeit with the teenage milieu of âKarate Kidâ (1984). The parallels to âFlashdanceâ are pretty glaring: Instead of being concerned about auditioning for a dance school, the protagonist is concerned about making the school team. Instead of riding a bicycle, she rides a moped. Instead of living in a âhipâ warehouse apartment, she trains at a cool carpet warehouse. Instead of a wealthy beau, she has a rich best friend. Instead of her ballet teacher pal passing away, someone else close dies. I had a bad attitude about this flick when I first started watching since the dubious version I viewed (from Youtube) had washed out colors, obviously taken from a VHS. However, the story & characters pulled me in enough to enjoy the movie. No, itâs not as good as âFlashdanceâ nor great like âKarate Kid,â but if youâre in the mood for an 80âs flick in the mold of âDirty Dancingâ itâs likable and fills the bill just fine despite its predictableness and a few eye-rolling bits. You canât beat the Niagara Falls area locations. I was interested in the movie because I was curious to see the two stars when they were so young, but also because Iâm familiar with a few of director Paul Lynchâs other filmsâspecifically âProm Nightâ (1980), âHumongousâ (1982) and âBulliesâ (1986)âand I wanted to see how heâd do in a different genre. Quite good, actually. While d'Abo is a highlight on the female front, so is brunette Nicole Kolman, who plays the âhotâ stepsister with several possible boyfriends. Kolman only appeared in two films, this one and the similar âBody Movesâ (1990). Meanwhile Jessica Steen is notable as best friend, Carla. I canât close without mentioning the coachâs hideous red mullet, which I hoped had gone out of style with Mrs. Brady a full decade earlier. The film runs 1 hour, 36 minutes (full version), and was shot in Toronto and Niagara Falls. GRADE: B-