The “Dirty Dancing” remake on ABC, which aired Wednesday night, was perhaps doomed from the start. Why mess with a classic? (Seriously, though: Why?) Early promos did little to dispel the fear that the remake was a hot mess waiting to happen; reviews that came in right before the special’s airtime didn’t help, either.
The new version wasn’t totally reprehensible — Sarah Hyland, Debra Messing and Nicole Scherzinger are all charming, and J. Quinton Johnson of Broadway’s “Hamilton” is a talented but underutilized new face. Still, the original “Dirty Dancing” — with its memorable lines and delightful rom-com trappings — remains the girl ABC told its iteration not to worry about. Try as the network might, the “Dirty Dancing” remake failed to capture the poignancy and heart of the original, preferring to whack its audience over the head with character exposition and the feminism that felt so fresh and subversive in the original film.
As with all one-time-only TV events these days, Twitter showed up to watch the glorious trainwreck firsthand. Let’s recap some of the cringe-ier moments.
All the out-of-place singing numbers
Johnny sang. Baby sang. Lisa sang. Dr. and Mrs. Houseman sang! Seriously everyone sang, presumably to flesh out the program so it would take up a full three-hour television block, and hardly any of it was memorable. “Grease: Live!” this was not.
#DirtyDancing and now the vocal stylings of Mr. Houseman
— lilmssunshine761 (@lilmssunshine76) May 25, 2017
The unexpected drama with the Housemans’ marriage
Jerry Orbach’s and Kelly Bishop’s characters never offered any indication in the original film that behind their picture-book marriage was a dried-up sex life and the threat of divorce, but thats what Baby’s parents were up to this time around. The resolution at the end — they decide to stay together, nearly get caught by their kids while having sex, and even join in (singing!!!) the iconic final dance number. While it was nice to get a little more shading in of these characters, this plotline felt rushed.
This is NOT Jake Houseman. Jerry Orbach’s Jake was a devoted husband and father. This one can’t bother w/ anything but golf #DirtyDancing
— Bellajewels (@Bellajewels) May 25, 2017
The lack of chemistry between Baby and Johnny
Pretty much all of the Twitter commentary seemed to agree on one thing: Abigail Breslin and Colt Prattes did not steam up the dance floor.
[Not my] Johnny looks at [not my] Baby the way I look a text message I’ll probably put off answering for at least 45 minutes. #dirtydancing
— Kristen (@_kcordz) May 25, 2017
The missing Schumachers, the wallet-stealing elderly couple
Their whole part in the plot was subbed in with Katey Sagal’s character, a “bungalow bunny,” framing Johnny for stealing her Rolex. The Schumachers were robbed (pun absolutely intentional).
The lackluster dance moves
In the original, dancing was everything. In this version, Breslin —although she tried — just wasn’t hitting those mambo steps with the same gusto Jennifer Grey did.
The remaking of classic songs …
It is a truth universally acknowledged that “Hungry Eyes” and “She’s Like the Wind” should not be messed with.
Was the music for #DirtyDancing done on a Casio???? For the love of God!!!
— Scott Gullett (@ScottUri99) May 25, 2017
Ugggghhhhh!!!! You can butcher the casting but don’t butcher the soundtrack! Now wrong version of #hungryeyes #Dirtydancing
— Stephanie (@sdb3j) May 25, 2017
… and the mishandling of the original film’s iconic lines
How do you make an unexpectedly delightful line about a watermelon so forced? How?!
THEY DIDN’T EVEN GET THE WATERMELON LINE RIGHT #DirtyDancing http://pic.twitter.com/DEwEPPqYWY
— AmaliaO (@AmaliaMO) May 25, 2017
The awkward Baby-as-adult framing
Because nothing is sacred, the whole remake was framed around a 1980s Baby, now a grown-up, seeing “Dirty Dancing: The Musical” on Broadway and reminiscing about the summer that changed everything. At the end — surprise! — she encounters Johnny Castle, who directed the production. Then, Baby’s kid and husband make an appearance, to show Johnny that she’s all grown up and cool now. Exit the theater, zoom in on Breslin’s face, and finish on a classic freeze frame shot.
It all begged the question: But why?
Daughter: “My mommy dances.” Baby: “Not really.” TRUEST LINE OF THIS “MOVIE.” #dirtydancing
— Jamie (@JamieKristian) May 25, 2017
Alas, even with the industry’s current thirst for remakes, on Wednesday night we all learned some things are better left alone.
THIS IS HOW ITS SUPPOSED TO BE DONE #DirtyDancing http://pic.twitter.com/qtF3fvMeTO
— tiffany testa (@tiffanytestaa_) May 25, 2017
Somebody needs to put this whole movie in the corner…. #DirtyDancing
— Joe Dillard (@JoeDillrd) May 25, 2017
#DirtyDancing nice they included the shot of the people who appreciate this remake http://pic.twitter.com/1FXlp86Cdw
— Genesa Camacho (@camacho_gen) May 25, 2017
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May 25, 2017 at 09:05AM
from Jillian Capewell
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