Bring It On: All or Nothing
Bring It On: All or Nothing (previously known as Bring It On Yet Again) is a 2006 American comedy film directed by Steve Rash and starring Hayden Panettiere and Solange Knowles-Smith.[1] It is the third installment in the Bring it On series of films that revolves around high school cheerleading. The film was released direct-to-DVD on August 8, 2006.
Bring It On: All or Nothing
Alyson Fouse
David Roessell
Danny Saphire
- August 8, 2006
99 minutes
United States
English
This film, which is the second sequel to Bring It On, has a tenuous link to its predecessors, featuring only a similar plot of competing cheerleading teams that have to try something different in order to win. There are no recurring cast members or canonical references to the preceding films. However, the film stylistically refers to its predecessors in that it is the third film in the Bring It On series to open with a choreographed musical number that turns out to be a dream sequence of the protagonist, and like all three films, the end credits feature outtakes and clips of the cast having fun dancing.
Plot[edit]
Britney Allen is living the "dream life": she is the cheerleading captain and the girlfriend of Brad Warner, the standout quarterback at Pacific Vista High School, and to top it off, she is one of the richest girls in school. But when her father loses his job, her perfect life comes crumbling down before her as she and her family are forced to move to Crenshaw Heights, a working-class area, and Britney, being the "white girl," suffers a huge culture shock as she attempts to adjust to her new life and finds herself at odds with her new classmates who come from very rough walks of life and believe she is nothing more than an idiotic Barbie. But when Britney proves them wrong by joining their cheer team, the tension between them is felt both on court and off.
Reception[edit]
Bring It On: All or Nothing received little attention from published movie critics. On review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, it has a score of 20% based on reviews from 5 critics.[2]