The
Last Song

You can tell Miley Cyrus is trying to show her character is filled with
dramatic, painful agony because she scrunches up her face like a
Cabbage Patch Doll (or Renee Zellweger). Good luck with that acting
career.
Cyrus stars as Ronnie - a troubled teen angry at her Dad (Greg
Kinnear), angry at her Mom (Kelly Preston), and just plain angry at the
world. Now, she's stuck spending the summer in a quaint beach house
with Dad and her little, annoying brother, Jonah (Bobby Coleman). Of
course, Ronnie never recovered from the anguish over her parents'
divorce, gave up on her dreams of being a pianist, and fell in with the
wrong crowd. Yet, you have a feeling all of that is about to change
(because that's what happens in movies)
As she spends time in this little town, Ronnie starts to meet the
locals, including Will (Liam Hemsworth) - the volleyball playing dude
who rarely wears a shirt and showcases the most intense blonde
highlights this side of Kirstie Alley (honey, you are a brunette, the
blonde hair makes you look even fatter).
Will Ronnie allow Will into her heart?
As she spends time with Dad, will the old wounds heal?
Can director Julie Anne Robinson deliver the beach volleyball scene
America has been craving for since Top Gun?
The Last Song has very little to offer any
moviegoer who has experienced puberty. Sadly, it puts every
cliché ever invented on display, then gives Miley Cyrus haters
enough material to keep them in business until the Jonas Brothers go
gray.
While watching The Last Song, you have to ask yourself, "what's
stiffer and more horrendous, the acting or the dialogue?" Granted, the
script doesn't do them any favors, but Cyrus and Hemsworth both come
off as affected and vacant.
Hemsworth proves he was hired for his teeth and abs instead of his
acting skill as he only succeeds when his mouth is shut and his shirt
is off. I started hoping for volleyball scenes, so I wouldn't have to
listen to his voice reciting lines and attempting to be funny and
romantic when he is neither.
Then, it is outright painful to witness Cyrus struggling in her big
dramatic moments and forcing every word as a great actor like Kinnear
blows her away without trying. It's like watching me attempting to play
one-on-one with LeBron James.
She is forcing every emotion and making it clear she is acting, while
Kinnear has an easygoing, effortless style that shows you he has become
the character. I saw the movie with a bunch of people who won tickets
through a local radio station, and they were laughing at her big
dramatic scene, when a good actress would have had the audience in
tears. Sure, Cyrus sells more tickets, but you could walk onto the
streets of Hollywood and pick out 100 young actresses who are better.
Finally, The Last Song wouldn't be a Nicholas Sparks inspired
movie (it's based on one of his books) without a bunch of melodramatic
twists towards the end, but it becomes tiring as one after the other is
piled on, so get ready for a movie that feels like it will never end,
no matter how hard you pray to your God.
The Last Song is rated PG for thematic
material, some violence, sensuality and mild language.

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