I should add to that (which almost reached the character limit) that it gets plus points for the surprisingly accurate set decoration (backpacks, the stage) of the amateur #salsa class attended by the leads, but several minus points for (a) that not being not at all how everyone else in the room would react to two people falling over repeatedly doing a dip, and (b) the extras in the montage of supposedly week-after-week classes all dancing in the same places and the same costumes in successive shots.

Enjoy the magically disappearing helmet hair, too.

Minor goofs, as this isn't exactly a high-budget production. And the set people did have a fair go at trying to make it look like the bookstore was progressively being decorated as the weeks wore on.

#SameTimeNextWeek #CanadianMovies

#SameTimeNextWeek (2017) was definitely more cheery than #OnTheBeach. Although it did have its sad moments, given the storyline; there were some lighthearted moments as well: and of course it had a positive moral at the end.

It's yet another made-for-#USTelly romance and morality tale. Entirely predictable, usual nonsensical character actions and misunderstandings just to drive the plot, largely Canadian cast, and once again #Canada masquerading as generic small-town U.S.A.. The script carefully avoided any discussion of the hospital doctor's job that would place it in either country.

I did have one weird problem watching it. I kept mis-reading the title as, and substituting in the dialogue whenever someone said the phrase, 'See You Next Tuesday'. It didn't help when a character came close with a valediction involving seeing someone else next Thursday. I have been over-exposed to that juvenile gag throughout my life, it seems. (-:

#CanadianMovies