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Footloose is a 1984 American drama film directed by and written by . It tells the story of Ren McCormack (), a teenager from Chicago who moves to a small town, where he attempts to overturn a ban on dancing enforced by the efforts of a local minister ().

The film was released on February 17, 1984, by Paramount Pictures, and received mixed reviews from critics, but was a box office success, grossing $80 million in North America, becoming the seventh highest-grossing film of 1984. The songs "Footloose" by and "Let's Hear It for the Boy" by were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song.


Plot
natives, Ren McCormack, and his mother, Ethel, move to the small town of Bomont, , to live with Ren's aunt and uncle. While attending the church, he meets Reverend Shaw Moore, his wife, Vi, and their daughter, Ariel, who rebels against her father's strict religious nature, and behaves recklessly.

At school, Ren befriends Willard Hewitt. He soon learns that the town council has banned dancing and rock music within the . Ren soon falls for Ariel, angering her boyfriend, Chuck Cranston, who challenges him to a game of chicken involving tractors. Ren wins the challenge but only because his shoelace got caught on the foot pedal so he couldn't jump off.

Distrusting Ren's influence, Reverend Moore forbids Ariel from seeing him. Ren drives Willard, Ariel, and her friend, Rusty, to a bar past the state line to go dancing. Willard, unable to dance, becomes jealous and gets into a fight with a man dancing with Rusty.

On the drive home, Ariel describes how, five years earlier, her older brother died in a car accident after a night of alcohol and dancing. Their father then persuaded the to enact strict anti-liquor, anti-drug, and anti-dance laws. Ren decides to challenge the anti-dancing and rock music ordinance so the high school can hold a senior prom.

Willard is embarrassed he cannot dance, so Ren teaches him. Chuck confronts Ariel about her feelings towards Ren and they get into a physical altercation before breaking up. Ren helps Ariel conceal the physical assault before going home, cementing their relationship.

Later that night, someone (most likely Chuck) throws a brick with the words, "Burn in Hell," through a window at Ren's house. When his uncle criticizes Ren's outspoken behavior, Ethel tells Ren that though his actions cost her her job, he should stand up for what he believes is right.

With Ariel's help, Ren goes before the town council to advocate revoking the anti-dancing law. He reads several Bible verses and cites the scriptural significance of dancing as a way to rejoice, exercise, and celebrate. Although Reverend Moore is moved, the council votes against Ren's proposal. Vi, who supports the movement, tells Moore that he cannot be everyone's father and is hardly one to Ariel.

Despite further discussion with Ren about his own family losses and Ariel telling her father she is not a virgin, Rev. Moore does not change his stance. The next day, he finds members of his congregation that they claim endanger the town's youth. Realizing the situation has become uncontrollable, Moore stops the book burners, chastises them, and sends them home.

The following Sunday, Reverend Moore asks his congregation to pray for the high school students putting on the prom, being held in a just yards over the county line and beyond Bomont's jurisdiction. On prom night, Moore and Vi listen from outside the mill. Chuck and his friends arrive, attacking Willard; Ren arrives in time to even the odds and knocks out Chuck. Ren, Ariel, Willard and Rusty rejoin the party and happily dance the night away.


Cast

Production
came up with the idea for Footloose in 1979 and teamed up with 's IndieProd who set the production up at 20th Century Fox in 1981. Pitchford wrote the screenplay (his first) and most of the lyrics. However, Fox put it into turnaround. In 1982, Paramount Pictures made a deal for the film. When negotiations with initially stalled, was approached to direct the film but he turned it down to direct Splash instead. was hired by Paramount to direct the film, his first film since Heaven's Gate.

After a month of working on the film, the studio fired Cimino, who was making extravagant demands for the production, including demanding an additional $250,000 for his work, and ended up hiring Ross.


Casting
and were both slated to play the lead. The producers were impressed with Cruise because of the famous underwear dance sequence in , but he was unavailable for the part because he was filming All the Right Moves. Lowe auditioned three times and had the dancing ability and the "neutral teen" look that the director wanted, but injury prevented him from taking the part. Christopher Atkins claims that he was cast as Ren, but lost the role. Bacon had been offered the main role for the film Christine at the same time that he was asked to do the screen test for Footloose. He chose to take the gamble on the screen test. After watching his earlier film Diner, the director persuaded the producers to go with Bacon.

The film also stars as Reverend Moore's independent daughter Ariel, a role for which Madonna and also auditioned. Valerie Bertinelli and Jennifer Jason Leigh were also considered. appears as Vi, the Reverend's devoted yet conflicted wife.

Tracy Nelson was considered for the role of Rusty.


Filming
Principal photography began on May 9, 1983, and took place at various locations in Utah County, Utah. The high school and tractor scenes were filmed in and around Payson and Payson High School. The church scenes were filmed at the First Presbyterian Church in American Fork, while the steel mill was the facility in Vineyard and The Lehi Roller Mills were the location where Bacon's character worked (Bacon briefly worked at the roller mill as research for his performance). The drive-in scenes were filmed in Provo at what was then a branch of the Hi-Spot burger chain. The restaurant chain closed in the late 1980s, and there is now an auto parts store at that location. The bar scene was filmed at The Silver Spur bar in downtown Provo. The bar and other surrounding buildings were demolished to make way for the Utah Valley Convention Center.

For his dance scene in the warehouse, Bacon said he had four : "I had a stunt double, a dance double Peter and two gymnastics doubles."


Film inspiration
Footloose is loosely based on the town of Elmore City, Oklahoma. The town had banned dancing since its founding in 1898 in an attempt to decrease the amount of heavy drinking. One advocate of the dancing ban was the Reverend from the nearby town of Hennepin, F. R. Johnson. He said, "No good has ever come from a dance. If you have a dance somebody will crash it and they'll be looking for only two things—women and booze. When boys and girls hold each other, they get sexually aroused. You can believe what you want, but one thing leads to another." Because of the ban on dancing, the town never held a prom. In February 1980, the junior class of Elmore City's high school made national news when they requested permission to hold a junior prom and it was granted. The request to overturn the ban to hold the prom was met with a 2–2 decision from the school board when school board president Raymond Lee broke the tie with the words, "Let 'em dance."


Soundtrack
The soundtrack was released in , 8-track tape, vinyl, reel-to-reel and CD format. The 1984 open reel release was among the last commercial releases on the format. The soundtrack was also re-released on CD for the 15th anniversary of the film in 1999. The re-release included four new songs: "Bang Your Head (Metal Health)" by , "Hurts So Good" by , "Waiting for a Girl Like You" by Foreigner, and the extended 12" remix of "Dancing in the Sheets".

The album includes "Footloose" and "I'm Free (Heaven Helps the Man)", both by , "Holding Out for a Hero" by (co-written and produced by ), "Girl Gets Around" by , "Never" by Australian rock band Moving Pictures, "Let's Hear It for the Boy" by , "Somebody's Eyes" by , "Dancing In The Sheets" by , and the romantic theme "Almost Paradise" by Mike Reno from and of Heart (co-written by ). The soundtrack went on to sell over 9 million copies in the USA. All songs in the initial release were co-written by Pitchford based on various songwriting styles: for "Holding Out for a Hero", he listened to various songs written by Steinman such as his work with and then wrote the first two lines ("Where have all the good men gone/And where are all the gods?/Where's the streetwise Hercules/To fight the rising odds?") in this manner to spark Steinman's creativity.

"Footloose" and "Let's Hear It for the Boy" both topped the Billboard Hot 100 and received 1984 Academy Award nominations for Best Music (Original Song). "Footloose" also received a 1985 Golden Globe Award nomination for Best Original Song – Motion Picture.

Composer adapted and orchestrated the film's score.

The music from the soundtrack was released prior to the film's premiere. The filmmakers felt that songs produced a stronger emotional response from people already familiar with them, which heightened the experience of watching the movie. The music video for "Footloose" had scenes from the movie, rather than footage of Loggins.The DVD commentary


Reception

Critical response
The film received mixed reviews from critics. Chicago Sun-Times critic called it "a seriously confused movie that tries to do three things, and does all of them badly. It wants to tell the story of a conflict in a town, it wants to introduce some flashy teenage characters and part of the time it wants to be a music video." Dave Denby in New York rechristened the film "Schlockdance", writing: " Footloose may be a hit, but it's trash – high powered fodder for the teen market... The only person to come out of the film better off is the smooth-cheeked, pug-nosed Bacon, who gives a cocky but likable Mr. Cool performance."

Jane Lamacraft reassessed the film for Sight and Sound "Forgotten pleasures of the multiplex" feature in 2010, writing "Nearly three decades on, Bacon's vest-clad set-piece dance in a flour mill looks cheesily 1980s, but the rest of Ross's drama wears its age well, real song-and-dance joy for the pre- Glee generation."

On , the film has a weighted average score of 42 out of 100 based on 12 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.


Box office
The film grossed $80,035,403 domestically. It became the seventh highest-grossing film of 1984.


Accolades
Academy AwardsBest Original Song"Footloose"
Music and Lyrics by and
"Let's Hear It for the Boy"
Music and Lyrics by Dean Pitchford and
Golden Globe AwardsBest Original Song"Footloose"
Music and Lyrics by Kenny Loggins and Dean Pitchford
Grammy AwardsBest Pop Vocal Performance, Male"Footloose" – Kenny Loggins
Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female"Let's Hear It for the Boy" –
Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal"Dancing in the Sheets" –
Best Rhythm and Blues Song"Dancing in the Sheets" – Dean Pitchford and Bill Wolfer
Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or a Television SpecialFootloose – Various Artists
(, , , Kenny Loggins,
Dean Pitchford, Tom Snow, , and Bill Wolfer)
ShoWest ConventionBreakthrough Performer of the Year
Young Artist AwardsBest Family Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy
Best Young Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical, Comedy, Adventure or DramaSarah Jessica Parker

AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs
  • "Footloose" – #96


Musical adaptation
In 1998, a musical version of Footloose premiered.
(2002). 9781557834324, Hal Leonard Corporation. .
Featuring many of the songs from the film, the show has been presented on London's West End, on , and elsewhere. The musical is generally faithful to the film version, with some slight differences in the story and characters.


Remake
Paramount announced plans to fast-track a of Footloose. The remake was written and directed by . Filming started in September 2010. It was budgeted at $25 million. It was released October 14, 2011.


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