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Magic Mike's Last Dance
Overlook Pick

Magic Mike's Last Dance

The final tease.
64
User Score599 ratings
TMDB 6.416+20231h 52mEnglish
ComedyDramaRomance

Synopsis

Mike Lane takes to the stage again after a lengthy hiatus, following a business deal that went bust, leaving him broke and taking bartender gigs in Florida. For what he hopes will be one last hurrah, Mike heads to London with a wealthy socialite who lures him with an offer he can’t refuse… and an agenda all her own. With everything on the line, once Mike discovers what she truly has in mind, will he—and the roster of hot new dancers he’ll have to whip into shape—be able to pull it off?

Director
Steven SoderberghFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Warner Bros. Pictures3 production companies
Release
February 9, 2023Released
Box Office
$52MBudget $45M

Top Cast

8 of 76
Channing Tatum
Channing Tatum
Mike Lane
Salma Hayek Pinault
Salma Hayek Pinault
Maxandra Mendoza
Ayub Khan-Din
Ayub Khan-Din
Victor
Jemelia George
Jemelia George
Zadie Rattigan
Juliette Motamed
Juliette Motamed
Hannah
Ethan Lawrence
Ethan Lawrence
Woody
Alan Cox
Roger Rattigan
Caitlin Gerard
Caitlin Gerard
Kim

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Feb 15, 2023

"Mike Lane" (Channing Tatum) is now reduced to tending bar at exclusive functions when he encounters the wealthy "Max" (Salma Hayek). She offers him $6k for a private dance, and this moves her world sufficiently for her to take him to London with an unique offer that shocks her estranged husband, their adopted daughter (and the narrator) "Zadie" (Jemelia George) and amuses her rather sceptical factotum "Victor" (Ayub Khan-Din). What's wrong with this film, though, is that it attempts to inflict a plot on what has been essentially, up to now, a series of (very) soft porn dance routines that allow those of us to relish some fit young blokes parading their abs and asses whilst giving us a good old dose of raunch! This offers very little of that, even at the end - and as such the thing struggles to engage. There are the odd moments that raise a smile, but Hayek overacts dreadfully and Tatum spends too much of his time standing around with his hands in his pockets as both deliver a rather strained and contrived dialogue. Simply, not enough happens on stage here and, well, let's hope it is, indeed, his last dance - this is poor, sorry.

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