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In trouble with the law, Josh, a New York teen DJ is court-ordered to live with his estranged father in North Dakota where he feels like an outsider until a last-place dance team asks him to help them prepare for a state competition.
There is nothing brave about "Bravetown," a film so paint-by-the-numbers bland that its efforts to piggyback the sacrifice of American servicemen and women for emotional depth is downright craven.
First-time director Daniel Duran, working from a screenplay by Oscar Torres that abounds in the maudlin and risible, isn't able to lift the ham-handed material to a place where it might ring true.
From a desperate, Nicholas Spark-wannabe script by Oscar Orlando Torres, director Daniel Duran has fashioned a movie we have all seen before. Many times.
While it hints at something deeper, this slick coming-of-age drama about redemption and reconciliation instead chooses a more formulaic path to catharsis.