There¡¯s something in the way he moves. Shinya Suzuki (Ryoma Takeuchi), Japan¡¯s reigning Latin dance champion, has the kind of physical prowess that can make grown men weep. The first time he demonstrates the basics of Cuban motion to his starchy near-namesake, standard ballroom supremo Shinya Sugiki (Keita Machida), he whips his shirt off and doesn¡¯t so much wiggle his hips as make his entire body ripple.

With his tousled blond hair, bad-boy aura and perfect abs, Suzuki is the kind of guy you¡¯d take to your bed, but probably not to meet your parents. Takeuchi inhabits the role with such gusto, you¡¯d never guess he didn¡¯t have any prior dance experience. It¡¯s a master class in ¡°peacock acting¡± ¡ª and the main reason for watching Keishi Otomo¡¯s otherwise plodding ¡°10 Dance.¡±

This Netflix original, adapted from a BL (boys¡¯ love) manga series by pseudonymous writer Inouesatoh, promises a flamboyant mix of dance-floor action and queer romance. But for the most part it¡¯s a flat-footed and deeply unsexy affair, almost as if the producers had a chastity coordinator on hand during the shoot, ready to pounce whenever things threatened to get too steamy.