
There is, according to Burlesque, a nightclub on the Sunset Strip that looks like a blend of Cabaret and Moulin Rouge  and employs a full contingent of dancers and musicians in the service  of a neo-retro-burlesque-blues program. Presiding over the craziness  within is Tess, a grande dame who also performs occasionally and who  could only, under these circumstances, be played by Cher. Entering the  scene is a young leather-lunged hopeful from Iowa named Ali, played by  Christina Aguilera in her movie-acting debut. The vibe of this glitzy  concoction is more Flashdance than Showgirls, despite  prerelease predictions that the film would be a campfest of epic  proportions. In fact, it's more cornball than trashy. Ali hits most of  the clichés of the genre: defying Tess's skepticism by proving her  mettle during an impromptu stage number; flirting with the nice-guy  bartender (Cam Gigandet, of Twilight) whose home she shares for a  while, in a purely platonic way, of course, just until she gets her  feet on the ground; and keeping a wary eye on the high roller (Eric  Dane, of Grey's Anatomy) who wants to possess her, because, you  see, he takes whatever he likes. And did we mention that Tess is facing  foreclosure on the club in a month's time? Seriously, you didn't see  that coming? Writer-director Steve Antin has no embarrassment about  putting any of this across, which may be why it all feels weirdly  innocent, if relentlessly silly. Stanley Tucci revives his gay assistant  from The Devil Wears Prada, Alan Cumming lurks about in an  undefined role that might well have been filmed months after everybody  else, and Kristen Bell enjoys a few wicked-witch moments as Ali's main  rival. Aguilera, needless to say, belts out her songs as only someone  with a very large voice can, and Cher stops the show with an  old-fashioned torch song ("You Haven't Seen the Last of Me") that is  clearly designed as a roof-raiser. (And, by gum, it works.) This is a  ridiculous movie, but it gets points for never claiming to be anything  else.
- Actors: Cher, Christina Aguilera
- Directors: Steve Antin
- Language: English
- Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Studio: Screen Gems
- DVD Release Date: March 1, 2011
- Run Time: 119 minutes
 
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