The Guardian (USA)

Magic Mike’s Last Dance review – third chunk of male stripper yarn is anti-climactic

- Peter Bradshaw

Channing Tatum’s buff character “Magic” Mike Lane, stripper and hunky sex-positive recipient of the thirsty female gaze, is back again for this goofy, but hastily packaged and oddly anti-climactic threequel from director Steven Soderbergh and screenwrit­er Reid Carolin.

As the US emerges from the Covid pandemic, Mike has fallen on hard times. He is approachin­g his 40th birthday (but looking well on it), a business he set up has failed and now he’s working as a barman. Yet, while goodhumour­edly serving drinks at a fancy charity gala in Miami, there is a connection between him and socialite-hostess Max Mendoza (Salma Hayek). Simmeringl­y sexy Max hears from one of her guests – this is Kim, played by Caitlin Gerard, a veteran of the first Magic Mike movie from 2012 – that Mike used to be a red-hot dancer and so Max asks him for a private show. Mike obliges in a sizzler of a quasi-sex-scene, and infatuated Max brings Mike over to London with her to direct and choreograp­h an oiled-up male dance show in the grand theatre she has gained from her soonto-be-ex-husband in the divorce proceeding­s.

There’s a fair bit of fun and some nice dance scenes along the way; Ayub Khan-Din is funny as Max’s droll valet Victor and Vicki Pepperdine does well as the repressed Brit bureaucrat who is persuaded to reverse her objections to the show with a private group dance on the top deck of a bus. But the film is streaked with a weird kind of eccentrici­ty and contains the most bewilderin­g “Intermissi­on” joke I have ever seen – a cod interval, placed almost randomly, with the word “Intermissi­on” over a cutesy picture of puppies, with zero comic impact.

Moreover, the whole film has a cobbled-together feel, almost as if Soderbergh only directed some key scenes and left the rest to someone else: the initial Mike-Max private dance, the pair of them gazing at each other in closeup over a dinner, kissing in the back of a cab afterwards. The other components, even the big choreograp­hed sequences, feel a bit generic. And towards the end, the spotlight swings disconcert­ingly away from Hayek and the all-important Mike-Max relationsh­ip towards two other, rather pointless female characters: Hannah (Juliette Motamed), who is the star of the stage show, and a “female ballet dancer” with whom Mike actually dances in front of the audience.

So why couldn’t Tatum have had a climactic onstage dance scene with Hayek, who is, after all, a very good mover? It’s baffling, and the dramatic tension and focus is dissipated with the extended final dance scene. But it’s nice to see Tatum back: a natural performer with marvellous physical grace and (underused) comic style.

• Magic Mike’s Last Dance is released on 9 February in Australia and 10 February in the US and UK.

 ?? ?? I’m your private dancer … Salma Hayek and Channing Tatum in Magic Mike’s Last Dance. Photograph: Courtesy of Warner Bros Pictures
I’m your private dancer … Salma Hayek and Channing Tatum in Magic Mike’s Last Dance. Photograph: Courtesy of Warner Bros Pictures

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