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The script, costumes, and props of The Last Song work hard to establish Miley Cyrus's dramatic-role bona fides as the 17-year-old crosses over from G to PG: Her character, constantly sneering high school grad Ronnie Miller, sports a tiny nose stud, stomps on the beach in Doc Martens, believes meat is murder, calls someone a bitch, reads Anna Karenina,and hurts her dads feelings. But Cyruss co-stars must work harder to enter the nearly impenetrable force field surrounding the Disney cash calf.
The second Nicholas Sparks adaptation, after Dear John, to appear in two months (at this rate of productivity, the melodramatist may become the white Tyler Perry), The Last Song reverses the order of page-to-screen transfer: Sparks wrote the screenplayhis first, sharing credit with his college pal, Jeff Van Wiebefore the novel, always with the intention of making this Cyruss big leap out of the hot-neon tween ghetto of Hannah Montana.(Though two Cyrus songs are on the soundtrack, the film strains so hard to prop up Cyrus as a legitimate actor that she sings onscreen only once, briefly, to Maroon 5s She Will Be Loved.) A serious star vehicle for a rabbity, charmless, pint-size marketing juggernaut, The Last Song deprives viewers of the only reliable pleasure in the Sparks filmographywatching actors, of varying talents, evince real emotion and passion from the syrupy source material. Channing Tatum and Amanda Seyfried ignite in Dear John, just as Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams did before them in The Notebook; the former offers the even more miraculous moment of a tender child-parent farewell between Tatum and Richard Jenkins. Sparkss latest finds Cyrus, sharing the screen with both a romantic interest and a fragile father, bonding most passionately with sea-turtle eggs.
The Last Song,unremarkably directed by first-timer Julie Anne Robinson, a TV vet, bears the usual Sparks trademarks: Southern beach-town setting, the evils of Dixie aristocracy, incurable disease in the penultimate act, the power of the epistolary. Children of divorce Ronnie and little brother Jonah (a gooey Bobby Coleman) are delivered by mom Kim (Kelly Preston) from New York City to Tybee Island, Georgia, home of dad Steve (Greg Kinnear) for the summer. A former piano prodigy (Dad taught her) and current shoplifter, Ronnie has refused to attend Juilliard or even touch the ivories, opting instead for a full-time career of adolescent insolence. She slams doors, upsetting Steve and Jonahs stained-glass-window restoration project (part of a nonsensical subplot that gives the film a light sheen of religiosity, culminating in a scene of Cyrus bathed in celestial light). She snarls at volleyball-loving, prole-posing Will (Liam Hemsworth) until his shared concern over the fate of the sea-creature embryos (the hatchlings steal the movie) and further knowledge of the life aquatic soften her resistance.
I cant recall ever squirming as much as I did during Ronnie and Wills first kiss; shiny, buff Hemsworth looks like hes locking lips with an Andy Hardyera Mickey Rooney in a wig (he must have liked itthe two are reportedly now dating). The Cyrus machinery repels any believable human connection onscreen, though shes not helped much by Sparks and Van Wies script: I dont want to be the next girl in a parade of girls, Ronnie snorts. What little heat is generated emanates solely from Hemsworths frequently bare chest; a mud fight between the two teens occurs only to make it necessary for the actor to shuck his shirt and hose off. (When, in another instance of disastrous dialogue, Ronnie tells Will, Maybe you should find someone more suited to your lifestyle, you wonder whether shes referring to readers of Honcho magazine.) But the real discomfort comes from watching Kinnear being forced to say, You are the kindest, sweetest, most beautiful daughter in the whole worldmost likely at Billy Rays insistence.
The movie is very bad
Nicole You are wrong the movie sucks
I love the movie because its very intersted and very good to watch and and I aslo like miley and billy ray cyrus. Plus I like the hannah montana epsiodes and all her songs and love to be her she has a brillinat live.
The movie sucks
Didn't see the movie. Probably won't however I didn't need to read the review to know what the response would be and hardly need to read anything in the Voice anymore. Everyone is Too Cool for journalistic objectivity these days. Knee jerk and pretentious. I was an avid reader - back in the day however, now that you're relying on rep. with obligatory rebel response to EVERYTHING, you've lost your street creds. Editors beware - you're subject to the same extinction as all other hard copy. To survive in the digital world you'll need to expand your range of perspective. Get some really good investigators (not just anti-establishment militia), and writers who don't need a thesaurus.
Cathy you are wrong Miley can not act all
Cathy you are wrong movie sucks big time
I did not want to see this movie. My 6 yo daughter watches enough Hannah Montana that I am sufficiently overexposed to Ms. Cyrus. I was dragged here by a friend in her late 30s. While I find this review humorous, its impact is that of a mean girl bullying a younger classmate. Given that this is a 16 yo in her first dramatic role, a little grace needs to be given, and the remarks on her appearance seem inexplicably bitter. To each her own: I found her beautiful. Even kids understand that there is more than one standard of attractiveness. Perhaps give Hemsworth, an Australian, credit for the same awareness. A woman in her 20s on my left sobbed uncontrollably as the film neared its conclusion, as my friend on the right wiped away a tear. I wasn't nowhere near where they were, but after years of watching Cyrus sputter Disney-speak in rapid-fire fashion, I'm glad to see her slow it down and find her way as a dramatic actress. I think we adults should just calm down and not take it out on her because she found fame early.
Ashley Give me a break Miley sucks and you know it
Miley can't act the movie sucks
Whoever wrote this article is just a jealous miley hater!!!! Just cause your not as pretty as her or make as much money on her doesnt mean you have to hate on her! Your probally a fat ugly rat faced single 40 year old woman who is jealous of a 17 year old who has a guy you could never have. SO why don't you go do something better with your life than hating on a 17 year old girl. maybe if you got off your fat *ss and went out in to the real world you could get a guy but since your a jealous b*tch you can't. BURN IN HELL!!!!!
This review is the definition of bias and pretentious.
Rabbity. Yep. And charm-free, but not entirely to blame for having been pimped from a tender age by her nearest and dearest. The publicity Hemsworth gets from hanging with Ms. Rooney is worth its weight in mullets, so he'll neatly sidestep those teeth for awhile til he gets his own thing going.
Just because there was no gay secks subplot you hated it, right? Can't you just enjoy a little melodrama? Can you not whine like a bitch in heat everytime you open your Macbook. Miley, it's OK, come over here and I will hold you.
I haven't seen the movie so I can't judge it yet. The Notebook was the one well written storyline Sparks made, with a great director and cinematographer, and the 2 actors were phenomenal in it. It was set out to tell a story and describe love, not try to make you cry. The story was enhanced by the actors; without the performances it might not have did as well as it did. Dear John was horrible, the storyline and the actors. The 2 main actors were so bad in too many ways to describe and had no chemistry. So it seems to me, in order for a Sparks movie to work, the movie must relay on very heavily on the actors. So I don't know if it is a fair judgment to base Cyrus' future on this movie.
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