Let It Be Me (film)

Let It Be Me (alternatively: Flirty Dancing ) is an American comedy film from 1995 directed by Eleanor Bergstein, who also wrote the screenplay..

Action

The teacher Emily and the psychologist Gabriel are engaged. Gabriel sees a couple dancing and spontaneously decides to take dance lessons with Corinne for the planned wedding in a few weeks. He falls in love with the woman. It turns out that Corinne's friend and business partner Bud in high school with Emily was a friend; he was then her partner.

Meanwhile advertises Corinne's colleague John to the widowed Marguerite. One day John sees Marguerite, as these distribute food to the homeless and his friends. Marguerite invites John into a restaurant and asks him to help her with the management of their assets. She says his dealings with the homeless proves that he is a trustworthy man.

Gabriel speaks out with Emily and insists that both no longer attend the dance classes. Emily rejects this. She meets Bud, while Gabriel is to travel to a conference in another city. Emily tells Bud that she was pregnant in high school by him, but broke off the pregnancy when Bud left the city. Meanwhile, Gabriel meets with Corinne. Both couples meet Corinne as John and Bud because of an intruder in the dance school is calling.

Emily and Gabriel say from the wedding; Gabriel pulls out of their apartment. They meet at the wedding of John and Marguerite. Bud and Corinne are reconciled at the party and dance together. Emily noticed some couples would go together and remembers her first meeting with Gabriel. In the last scene, Emily is shown during a lesson in school, Gabriel brings their child to school.

Reviews

Movie service wrote that the film was "a romantic comedy in modern garb, which lives mainly by their good performers, which one decreases every turn of the plot, as their characters are introduced complex ". To him, " sometimes the swing " missing, he offered but " lovable and tasteful entertainment" and wait "with the 64 year old, still girly acting Leslie Caron in an almost separate subplot on ".

The magazine TV directly 23/2007 described the film as " hollow".

The magazine TV Movie wrote that the film was an " honest " version of Dirty Dancing " for older term ".

Background

The cost of production was estimated at 20 million U.S. dollars.

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