There are 80s movies that should never be remade. Either they’re Revenge of the Nerds and too controversial, or a product of a very particular decade like Wall Street.
In the case of the 1987 blockbuster, Dirty Dancing, it features the perfect star, in the perfect role, at the perfect moment in time. Whenever you hear the term “a star-making performance,” know that nothing personifies it more than Patrick Swayze’s performance as Johnny. It’s been derided for having a nonexistent plot and poor characters, but by the time “I Had The Time Of My Life” kicks on, none of that matters, and now one of the most popular movies in history is on Netflix to show a new generation why Swayze became a legend.
Dirty Dancing is set in 1963 in the Catskills, where Frances “Baby” Houseman (Jennifer Grey, a year earlier she was playing Ferris Bueller’s sister) joins her mother Marge (Kelly Bishop), sister Lisa, and father, Jake (Law and Order icon Jerry Orbach) for her final Summer before going off to Mount Holyoke College in the Fall. The upper-crust guests are served by equally well-heeled staff, except for the entertainment, all of whom are demeaned as working-class stiffs by the hotel management, including Johnny Castle, one of the dancers. That doesn’t stop the immediate chemistry between Baby and Johnny, and even 40 years later, it’s clear why this film caused a sudden spike in dance classes across the country.
Baby and Johnny bond after Baby fills in for his partner, who had to miss a performance to get an abortion from a back-alley doctor that goes horribly wrong. That’s where Baby’s dad, a doctor, gets involved and bans his little girl from ever seeing Johnny.
It’s all based on a simple mistake that, if characters stopped and listened to each other, could be resolved within 30 seconds. If that happened, we’d be denied the final moment of Dirty Dancing, and Swayze managing to turn “Nobody puts Baby in the corner” into one of the greatest quotes of the decade.
Their training scenes take place off where no one at the resort will find them, as they learn to read each other’s bodies and understand how they each move. It’s the type of sequence no modern Hollywood film can replicate.
There are no special effects, both Swayze and Grey were trained dancers, and it’s incredibly understated with a focus on moving on the one and two’s as Johnny explains. That means in a modern film, it would be a propulsive montage ending with sultry dance gyrations and not, as it does in Dirty Dancing, with Baby looking around to make sure no one can see her before practicing a dip.
Few stars today could be slotted into either of the lead roles, with the only two that could likely pull it off with the same chemistry and smoldering appeal as Patrick Swayze and Jenifer Grey being engaged couple, Tom Holland and Zendaya. They don’t make leading men like Swayze anymore, able to go from Dirty Dancing to Roadhouse, Ghost to playing a drag queen in To Wong Foo, he was able to seemingly do it all. Glen Powell, Austin Butler, Timothy Chalemet, none of today’s stars could pull off Johnny the same way.
Dirty Dancing was one of the most popular films ever on VHS and DVD, at one point selling 40,000 copies a day. So it makes sense that multiple attempts to replicate the movie’s success have all come up short.
The sequel, Dirty Dancing Havana Nights, is one of the worst movies of all time. A 1988 television series lasted only 10 episodes, and ABC’s live remake in 2017 was rightfully ignored by fans and critics. A legacy sequel starring Jennifer Grey was supposed to have been out in the Summer of 2025, but nothing’s been mentioned all year as multiple release dates have come and gone.
Hopefully, the legacy sequel has been shelved. While Jennifer Grey is an incredible talent and Dirty Dancing would not have been nearly as good without her, bringing it back without Patrick Swayze is just wrong. His performance as Johnny has made women lose their minds for decades and inspired men to take up dancing, leaving a hole that could never be filled.
Hollywood studios today can’t fake chemistry between stars during explicit scenes. Never mind the smoldering tension between Johnny and Baby that relied on small giggles, a well-placed hand, and enough charisma to power Los Angeles.
Dirty Dancing isn’t only one of the best movies of the 1980s; it’s one of the best of all time, and it’s now streaming on Netflix.
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