ABCD: Anybody Can Dance is a 2013 Indian 3D dance film directed and choreographed by choreographer Remo D'Souza and produced by Siddharth Roy Kapur and Ronnie Screwvala. The film stars Prabhu Deva and Ganesh Acharya in key roles. The participants of Dance India Dance also appear. Along with the Tamil and Telugu dubbed versions titled Aadalam Boys Chinnatha Dance and ABCD respectively. The film, made at a budget of Rs 12 crore, was released worldwide on February 8, 2013.
After having a bitter disagreement with his friend and manager Jehangir Khan (Kay Kay Menon) about the latter's blatant abuse of power and influence to win a dance competition called "Dance Dil Se" for his team JDC (Jehangir Dance Company), the choreographer of the dance company, Vishnu (Prabhu Deva), quits his job. At first he wants to return home to Chennai, but his friend Gopi (Ganesh Acharya) persuades him to stay in Mumbai with him. One day, he observes several young men using parkour to evade the police. They turn out to be proteges of Gopi, but despite their obvious raw talent, they lack the discipline required to become serious artists; they demonstrate this disastrously at a local event for a politician, wherein they set the stage on fire. After witnessing the same young men showing their dancing abilities at Ganpati Chaturthi to best their rival neighborhood, Vishnu decides to start his own dance group with them; ultimately preparing them to compete in "Dance Dil Se". However, the lack of discipline among the dancers and the rivalry between the two factions in the group lead by D (Dharmesh Yelande) and Rocky (Salman Yusuff Khan) leads to multiple creative and emotional blocks. Initially, only Rocky and his gang are willing to attend the free classes, but soon D and his friends gravitate towards the studio.
They are soon joined by Chandu (Punit Pathak), a troubled but extraordinarily talented man suffering from a drug addiction, Shaina (Noorin Sha), a "bar dancer", and Rhea (Lauren Gottlieb), a Westerner who was JDC's star dancer until Jehangir tried to sexually assault her during a "private instruction". Despite teasing from his peers, Chandu defends Shaina's reputation in front of the class and the pair quickly fall for one another.
Despite repeated pleas for peace in the studio, the two main gangs continue to clash, driving Vishnu to his wit's end. However, the students seem to improve and as a reward, he gives them money to buy new speakers, but they nearly lose it all when Rhea takes them to an elite dance club and challenge the resident champions, a professional dance crew called "Fictitious Crew". Vishnu arrives at the last minute and wins back the money, but while his students gain new respect for him, he is furious with them. After some hard apologizing, he forgives them and they return to class with greater discipline and drive, only to suddenly be thrown out on the street after D's father calls the cops. During all of this Rocky and Rhea start to fall for each other whilst D burns with jelousy .The community complains that their children should not be mixing in such a way and only though an impromptu dance performance are the youth able to convince their families (save D, whose orthodox Muslim father refuses to accept that his son desires to be a dancer) of the importance of their talent.
.The crew head to Dance Dil Se and audition, but when Rocky and D fight onstage, their chances of even appearing on the show seem bleak. Jehangir, in a bid to crush Vishnu publicly, persuades the judges to take the "Dhongri Dance Revolution" crew on as a "comedy act". Faced with ridicule and the idea that they are a joke and not true dancers, DDR are realized by Vishnu that they must come together and get over their petty issues to become a true dance team. Rocky and D's personal problems are also sorted during this by the help of Chandu.Weeks before the finals, Chandu prepares to propose to Shaina, but he runs into his old drug dealer on the street. Now completely free from the hold of drugs, he refuses to fall back into that world, but the dealer knocks the ring intended for Shaina into the street. As he retrieves it, Chandu is hit by a truck and killed, leaving the team to perform their semi-final routine without him. Shaina and the rest of DDR are crushed by his death and resolve to honor him by performing with their all.At the finals, Jehangir pulls a dirty trick: he has an informant ( Mayur who was a performer in DDR but left it for a main lead role in JDC )among DDR and has ordered his dancers to copy the rival team's choreography. Faced with losing, DDR crafts a new routine on the spot, based around Lord Ganesha. Their heartfelt performance reminds the cold-hearted Jehangir why he and Vishnu started the JDC and is humbled as the DDR crew are rewarded with thunderous applause.