From Russia With Love. Using the Bond Theme to make "checking into a hotel room" seem like the coolest thing in the world.
Since your problem is understanding the appeal / qualities of dancing rather than an inability to dance yourself, I'd suggest a word implying dance-illiteracy is entirely correct.It's obviously something I'm missing as the massive popularity of stuff like Strictly suggests that millions of other people are really getting something out of watching it. I'd suggest that I have Dancelexia, if this wasn't NSC and I knew that someone would be along in a moment to point out that the 'lexia' element of the word refers to literacy not to an inability.
But without 'Dys' the word wouldn't imply dance illiteracy, it would imply dance literacy.Since your problem is understanding the appeal / qualities of dancing rather than an inability to dance yourself, I'd suggest a word implying dance-illiteracy is entirely correct.
Nobody expects reverse pedantry.
Pfft. Details.But without 'Dys' the word wouldn't imply dance illiteracy, it would imply dance literacy.
Surprised nobody has said Baby Driver.
The whole film is synced to the music and plays from the perspective of the main character. When he takes a headphone out the music will stop playing from that side, very cool.