The Forbidden Dance (1990) -

Review: The Forbidden Dance (1990) — When Environmentalism Met the Lambada

: It was born out of a feud between Cannon Films founders Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus, leading to two competing Lambada movies being produced simultaneously.

If you grew up in the early '90s, you likely remember the brief, fiery cultural explosion known as the . Marketed as "the forbidden dance," it was everywhere for about fifteen minutes. But did you know it was so popular that two rival films about it were released on the exact same day in 1990? One was Lambada , and the other—the one with the surprisingly heavy heart—was The Forbidden Dance . The Plot: Dance for the Trees The Forbidden Dance (1990)

The Forbidden Dance isn't just about hip-swiveling; it’s a "fish out of water" story with a political mission. The film stars as Nisa, a Brazilian tribal princess who travels to Los Angeles to stop a massive corporation from destroying her rainforest home.

: It served as an early showcase for Laura Harring, who would later become a muse for David Lynch in the masterpiece Mulholland Drive . Review: The Forbidden Dance (1990) — When Environmentalism

: Unlike its rival, this film tried to have a "soul," ending with actual statistics about rainforest destruction—a suggestion made by Harring herself.

While critics at the time found the tone inconsistent—veering from serious environmentalism to "endless pelvis gyrations"—the film has found a second life as a campy cult favorite. Here is why it sticks in the memory: But did you know it was so popular

Check out how the Lambada craze took the world by storm during this era: