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Groove Review

It’s Saturday night and Groove is on. An all-night underground rave

where kids converge at an abandoned San Francisco warehouse this is

where they let it all loose where anything can happen. Berkeley student

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Colin plans to propose to girlfriend Harmony at Groove and asks

reluctant roomie David to join them. Once there the scene intimidates

David but after he takes ecstasy with his pals hey the kids are all

right.

A collection of unknowns one step above film school friends comprise the

cast of this ultra-low budget production with the exception of a

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woefully underused Rachel True (from “The Craft ” the only recognizable

face). There is no thorough intro to this large collection of

characters thus little empathy for them. Still Hamish Linklater

(David) gives a nice performance as the identifiable amateur and Lola

Glaudini (as raver Leyla) shows true charisma and comfort in front of

the camera.

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Though he starts off on shaky ground first-time helmer Greg Harrison

does an excellent job capturing the energy and vibe of the underground

rave scene. The plot on the other hand is as memorable as your average

techno/trance single. What’s important here is the vibe and

Harrison delivers it with minimal conflict (given that your local

theater has great speakers) showing all aspects of the scene from the

top secret warehouse location and orgiastic “chill room” to the

adrenaline rush of the dance floor and the superstar DJ’s point of view

(building the perfect mix).

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