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When I Look At You Ft. David Bisbal

Miley Cyrus

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Rating: 4.8 out of 5 votes
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Submitted by: ahawo | Category: Miley Cyrus | Views: 1,733 | Comments: 0
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Description

Young Star contemplates future of Hannah Montana The Last Song, or, Hannah Montana vs. Human Mortality Miley Cyrus is a phenomenon and a superstar and a notable icon of North American Have It Your Way-ism, but she is not an especially talented thespian. As star of The Last Song, a melodrama written by Nicholas Sparks, the scribe behind The Notebook and A Walk to Remember, she does okay with surly teenaged charm and even with the weepy scenes, but scenes of dramatic confession and confrontation have an uncomfortable deadness. Its not Cyruss fault, of course, that Sparkss dialogue is so lifeless, so full of icky nonsense platitudes. The writing is so unrepentantly tossed-off that whenever characters reveal an intense emotional event from their past, they seem to speak in outline form. A kid makes a dramatic confession about accidentally starting a fire, Well, we were behind the church, just playin around, and, and drinkin, and then we started... Pause. Authority figure, Playing with fire? 'Tween television shows teach their young stars bad habits they're shot quickly, in blocky group shots that forego close-ups, and the cast learns to bully their lines because the laugh track will always deliver a gag for them; it's a safety net that disappears on a film set. In her coming-out performance after several lucrative years as Hannah Montana, 17-year-old Miley Cyrus does her best in The Last Song, but the romantic melodrama ultimately doesn't give her a great...

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