汉娜·蒙塔娜观后感
不知是要电影的观后感还是电视剧的,两种都给你吧:
电视剧的:
1
“Hannah Montana” is a live-action comedy series about a teenage pop star leading a double life. Miley Cyrus plays Miley Stewart, who appears to be a typical 14-year-old with the normal teenage struggles of finding herself and fitting in. But, unbeknownst to her classmates and others around her, make-up, lighting, and a blonde wig transform Miley into popular singer Hannah Montana, whose confidence and charisma light up the stage.
Originally from Tennessee, Miley now lives in Malibu, California with her father/manager Robby Stewart (played by her real-life father country music star Billy Ray Cyrus) and her brother Jackson (Jason Earles). Her family and her two best friends – Lilly (Emily Osment) and Oliver (Mitchel Musso) – are among the few who know
With country music legend Billy Ray Cyrus and his adorable daughter Miley as the stars, this show has a lot of promise. Billy Ray and Miley convey a great daddy-daughter relationship, and both add humor as well as a touch of sentimentality to the show. Emily Osment (Lilly) and Mitchel Musso (Oliver) deliver solid and contributing characters as well. However, some characters and themes in the show go overboard (but that's to be expected in the Disney kid/tween genre).
A major focus of Hannah Montana is the plight of Miley to be treated as a normal teen despite her fame, thus the need to keep her pop star status a secret. In portraying her school-time struggles, the popular girls take antagonist center stage. The “in” girls trade insults, pranks and such with Miley and her friends. These unrealistic exchanges don’t provide great examples to the tweens watching the show. Even with only a 30 minute show, I think the writers could come up with more thoughtful insights into the difficulties of the middle school social scene.
Miley’s brother Jackson’s exaggerated twang makes his frequent comments about his love interests sound a little icky, and the tailor’s embellished character traits are also a little grating.
电影的:
1
I'm not now nor have I ever been a fan of the TV series Hannah Montana. I tried watching an episode once just to see what all the hoopla was about but couldn't make it through the entire 30 minutes. But that's okay because I'm not part of the key demographic Disney's targeting with Hannah Montana. Pre-teens are who the series is meant to please, and that's the same audience that should go gaa-gaa over Hannah Montana the Movie.
Hannah Montana the Movie is cute, non-offensive, has an 'important lesson' and some catchy tunes. Never mind the storyline or some of the sketchy performances (yes, I'm talking about you Tyra Banks), this Hannah Montana movie is what it is, and taken in that context it's not all that bad.
Miley Cyrus and Lucas Till in 'Hannah Montana the Movie.'
© Disney EnterprisesThe Story
As with Clark Kent and his glasses, all it takes is a wig and some trendy clothes to makeover normal teen Miley Stewart (Miley Cyrus) into pop star Hannah Montana. Forget that Miley and Hannah look exactly alike – Miley's face is very distinctive. Forget that any teen with a brain could figure out they share the same voice. Nobody knows Miley and Hannah are one in the same in this happy make-believe universe. And in this universe, Hannah's a big deal and Miley's getting too big for her britches or so says her dad, Robby Ray (Miley's real dad Billy Ray Cyrus).
In an attempt to puncture Miley/Hannah's over-inflated ego, Robby Ray tricks her into returning to Tennessee for her grandmother's birthday. And not only is Miley forced into taking time off when she'd rather be in New York, things get really traumatic when dad tells her no more Hannah. That of course puts Miley in a huff, but the GQ model working as a cowboy (Lucas Till) at grandmother's ranch helps Miley get her mind off of no longer being a superstar in teen circles. But - and here comes the big lesson part - Miley's little Tennessee town needs to raise $500,000 or else a mall will go up where family-owned stores now stand, so it's up to Miley to discover what's really important while helping to save the small town.
The Cast
Miley Cyrus is fun to watch. Okay, so right now I wouldn't call her the heir apparent to fill Meryl Streep's shoes, but the camera does love her. As for the rest of the cast, Miley Cyrus' co-stars from the Hannah Montana series don't have much screen time, other than Billy Ray who's fine playing the part of his real daughter's dad. Newcomer Lucas Till's sure to gather quite a following and might even make some Hannah Montana fans take up horseback riding on the off chance guys like him really do hang around barns.
Miley Cyrus in 'Hannah Montana the Movie.'
© Disney EnterprisesThe Bottom Line
I have to admit that I wasn't all that enthused about taking in a screening of a Hannah Montana movie. I know, it's my job, which is why I bit the bullet and saw the movie. But reviewing a film with such a specific, hard-core audience is a tough task for someone who is so not into the source material – and not conversant with the ins and outs of the Hannah Montana world. Yet I found myself caught up in the pure, joyful sort of innocence of the story. Granted, it's a story that doesn't make a lick of sense to the outside world (meaning the world inhabited by everyone who doesn't watch Disney TV). But seriously, it's a Hannah Montana movie - it's not Shakespeare.
The 9 year old Hannah Montana expert I took with me to the screening said it was better than she thought it would be, which perfectly echoes my reaction to the very kid-friendly film.
2
Let’s first talk about the movie as it’s being sold and as it will no doubt be understood by the bulk of its young audience: “Hannah Montana: The Movie” brings the TV series to the big screen with lots of energy. To those unfamiliar with the setup, Hannah is one of the world’s most successful pop stars. She’s also the secret identity of teenager Miley Stewart (Miley Cyrus), who wants to be able to grow up as a normal kid. Miley goes to school, has friends, and seems utterly typical, but when she throws on a blonde wig and slathers on the makeup, she becomes superstar Hannah.
As the film begins, we see that the strain of her two identities is starting to show: Miley needs to be at the Sweet 16 party of her BFF Lilly (Emily Osment), but Hannah is busy trying to ditch a persistent British paparazzo (Peter Gunn). Hannah’s publicist Vita (Vanessa Williams) wants Hannah in New York City to sing at a big awards show, but Miley’s dad Robby Ray (Billy Ray Cyrus) wants his daughter to come back with him to Tennessee to celebrate the birthday of Miley’s maternal grandmother Ruby (the great Margo Martindale.)
(Miley’s mother, played in a photograph by Brooke Shields, is long dead, because it’s not a Disney movie unless the protagonist is missing at least one parent.)
Miley starts wanting to be Hannah all the time, so Robby Ray diverts her private jet to Tennessee so that she can get back in touch with her roots. And while she objects at first, she winds up rekindling an old friendship with Travis (Lucas Till, dreamy in a focus group–friendly way) and helping grandma to save the town from an evil developer (Barry Bostwick) who wants to put up a giant mall.
Quick facts
Starring: Miley Cyrus, Billy Ray Cyrus
Director: Peter Chelsom
Run time: 1 hour, 42 minutes
MPAA rating: G
Kids will be entertained throughout by both the broad physical comedy (a bad guy slips on rolling walnuts and later falls into a giant mud puddle, a flaming dessert goes awry—all the bases are covered) and the catchy-in-a-Radio-Disney-way tuneful interludes, while parents can enjoy the presence of terrific performers like Williams, Martindale and “The Office’s” Melora Hardin, cast as a potential love interest for Ricky Ray.
“Hannah Montana: The Movie,” alas, punishes Miley so much that you’d think she was a Fassbinder heroine. There’s a recurring motif from something that Robby Ray used to tell his little girl about a caterpillar not being able to move much but still being able to dream about what she’d be. But if Miley is the caterpillar and Hannah is the butterfly, the movie repeatedly knocks Miley down a peg and humiliates her whenever she expresses an interest in blooming into international sensation Hannah full-time, reminding her that family and friends and home and hearth are more important.
Two things wrong with that: First, yes, those things do matter, but it always sounds hypocritical in a Hollywood movie, since they’re generally directed, produced, written by and starring people who couldn’t wait to get out of their small town so that they could pursue their show business ambitions. American movies and TV shows play this the-simple-life-is-better card with some regularity, and it always seems phony coming from entertainment types. (Or like a way to keep the competition from moving to L.A.)
Slideshow
Miley Cyrus: Teen queen
"Hannah Montana” star is a money-making sensation in music, TV and film.
more photos
Second, why is it so either/or? The TV show focuses on the fact that Hannah may be a big star, but Miley is still expected to get her homework done and to do the dishes. Hannah may sing “Best of Both Worlds” at the beginning of “Hannah Montana: The Movie,” but the film clearly wants her to choose just one.
But that’s until we get to the climax — as well as the alternate reading of the movie — and if you don’t want to know any spoilers, stop reading now. At the big benefit concert at the end, Miley has decided that Hannah is ruining her relationships with everyone, so she pulls her wig off, reveals her identity and says she’ll be Hannah no more. But after Miley sings one song as herself, the crowd begs her to become Hannah again, promising to keep her secret.
So after 90 or so minutes of excoriating Miley for wanting to be Hannah, her loved ones join the mob in yelling, “Put the wig back on!” (It’s like something out of “Vertigo.”)
The whole final sequence left me kind of queasy with its implication that the Miley character can’t be allowed to break out on her own and have her own career; no, she’s got to put that wig back on and keep on being Hannah, because the fans demand it. This is the alternate reading that may disturb some adult viewers — the notion that artists can’t progress into a new identity because their followers won’t allow it.
3
It’s been so long since I had to line up for a movie, I think the last time was for The Return of the King. Yesterday, the theatre wasn’t sold out, but the line of parents with excited girls – some with plastic headset microphones, others with Hannah Montana T-shirts – made it clear which movie was doing big business yesterday, and when we left the theatre two hours later, another line waited anxiously to go inside. I’ll be surprised if Hannah Montana: The Movie doesn’t top the box office this weekend.
Even parents who aren’t big fans of the music can be happy with the message of the movie. Many kids’ movies are pure fun, and many kids’ movies relay life lessons in a heavy-handed fashion. This movie finds a way to combine a lot of humor with a good message and be a solidly entertaining film. One of the strengths of the writing is that they didn’t go for the short joke, the easy, quick gag, but set things in place that come back later to be very effective and very funny.
In an era where so many little girls want to be Hannah Montana, the idea that Miley Stewart (as she’s known in the movie) would want to be Hannah Montana all the time isn’t that far-fetched. In the beginning of the movie we see a girl who’s mischievous and fun, but is beginning to spiral out of control. When she misses her best friend’s sixteenth birthday party, saying goodbye to her brother before he leaves for school, and gets splashed all over the tabloids after having a fight with Tyra Banks over a pair of shoes, her dad decides Hannah Montana has to go on vacation, and takes Miley home.
What adds to the tension of Miley’s return home is that her best friend slipped and told a reporter where Hannah Montana grew up. Miley is soon aware of the fact that the reporter is asking questions. Add in the fact that a developer wants to build a mall and condos on a valuable piece of land in this quiet, country town, and Miley’s slip that she knows Hannah Montana, and she finds herself put on the spot to ask Hannah’s help in their fundraising efforts to save the land from the contractor.
Along the way, Miley has discovered some of the simple joys in life, riding her horse, having fun with a friend, and has developed an attraction to a boy she knew from her childhood. Grandma has been at work setting Miley’s dad up as well, but when Miley has to decide whether she’ll be Hannah Montana to save the land from the developer, or be Miley and finally go on a date with the boy of her dreams, she tries to have the best of both worlds and the result is a disaster that not only jeopardizes her relationship, but her father’s new-found romance as well.
Although the culmination of the movie is expected, it isn’t dragged out. I went in to this movie expected it to be a simple, straight-forward story that was a bit thin, bolstered by music, and peppered with teen angst. I was pleasantly surprised. It’s a good, solid movie that has a lot of funny parts, a lot of touching scenes, and there are some nice cameos from Taylor Swift and Rascal Flatts.
Some of Bry’s favorite parts were when they ate lobster, which was very funny, and an early scene with Miley’s horse. I asked her if she learned anything from the movie. Her response:
4
Hannah Montana: The Movie is like an erotic daydream dealing with lust, taboo, and human nature. On the surface the film is a simple morality tale, but its depths surpass understanding. Over the past month I have watched the film more than 30 times, and I have analyzed it shot by shot. But the more clearly I see its physical manifestation, the more I am stirred by its erotic mystery.
The film opens with our middle-aged hero, Robby Ray Stewart (Billy Ray Cyrus), sitting in a changing room, staring longingly at a blonde female wig. Like Citizen Kane’s “Rosebud,” or the green light at the end of Gatsby’s pier, the object represents the protagonist’s deepest wants and desires. But what exactly is it that our hero desires?
Enter Miley Stewart (Miley Cyrus), a charming brunette nymphet in her early teens. Like most girls her age, Miley is trapped in a sexual purgatory; she has the innocence and wonder of a child coupled with the budding desires and feminine charms of a woman.
Before long, Miley makes her way to the changing room where Robby is impatiently waiting. Perhaps excited by what is about to transpire, he fidgets with his phone and anxiously begins to pace. His nervous energy becomes too much for young Miley to bear, and Robby is asked to wait outside. Disappointed, he complies with the young girl’s request.
With Robby gone, the metamorphosis begins. Using a large makeup kit and the aforementioned wig, the innocent girl we know as Miley transforms into a raw, sexual being known as Hannah Montana. The change is remarkable, and at once we understand Robby’s unrequited desires. The man is deeply torn by the sexual duality of Miley and Hannah. How can the girl be both innocent and seductive; pure, yet prurient? The point is cleverly driven home as Hannah takes the stage to sing her hit song, The Best of Both Worlds (Lyrics: You get the best of both girls).
Corporate greed, the cult of celebrity, urban sprawl, the concept of self: all of these issues and more are thoughtfully debated in the film. Yet all of these issues take a back seat to the topic of sexual desire and American morality as exemplified by the relationship between Robby and Miley. The sexual tension is palpable, and all but boils over when the young girl confesses her love to the older man through song. Yet neither is able to act upon their feelings since doing so would ruin their lives, or at the very least cause a huge inconvenience and limit their mobility to certain countries.
If the film has a flaw it’s that the eroticism, though prevalent throughout, is too subdued. Studio pressure for a “G” rating prevented the director from showing even the slightest bit of Quaalude-induced non-consensual sodomy. However, the subtlety speaks volumes. After all, much like his characters, the film’s director has fallen victim to society’s sexual hypocrisy.
如果觉得不够好我再找别的
汉娜蒙塔娜电影版有几部
Hannah Montana 一共有四季 , 第一季 http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XMTg5Mzc0ODY4.html
《汉娜蒙塔娜》电影版和电视剧版的主角是不是同一个人?
是一个人
求除了汉娜蒙塔娜,还有跟它一样的电视剧,有吗
最相似的就是爱卡莉(iCarly )了,还有查莉成长日记(Good Luck Charlie)
都是迪斯尼出品的美剧
你喜欢的话可以去迪幻网,他们专门做这类剧。
汉娜蒙塔娜 电视剧 主题曲
<<Hannah Montana>>第一季miley唱的歌
Song of Hannah Montana Season 1
1 "Theme Song"-- "The Best of Both Worlds"[1]
这个是片头曲
2 "Lilly, Do You Want To Know A Secret?"-- "This Is the Life"[1]
3 "Good Golly, Miss Dolly"-- "Who Said"[1]
4 "Good Golly, Miss Dolly"-- "If We Were A Movie"[1]
5 "Miley Get Your Gum"-- "Just Like You"[1]
6 "She's A Supersneak"-- "Pumpin' Up the Party"[1]
7 "We Are Family: Now Get Me Some Water!"-- "I Got Nerve"[1]
8 "I Can't Make You Love Hannah If You Don't"-- "The Other Side of Me"[1]
Hannah Montana Album
Disc 1 (Audio CD)
1 "The Best of Both Worlds" (Matthew Gerrard, Robbie Nevil) Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana) 2:54
2 "Who Said" (Matthew Gerrard, Robbie Nevil) Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana) 3:15
3 "Just like You" (Adam Watts, Andy Dodd) Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana) 3:14
4 "Pumpin' Up the Party" (Jamie Houston) Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana) 3:10
5 "If We Were a Movie" (Jennie Lurie, Holly Mathis) Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana) 3:04
6 "I Got Nerve" (Jennie Lurie, Ken Hauptman, Aruna Abrams) Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana) 3:06
7 "The Other Side of Me" (Matthew Gerrard, Robbie Nevil) Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana) 3:08
8 "This Is the Life" (Jennie Lurie, Shari Short) Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana) 2:59
9 "Pop Princess" (B. Romans) The Click Five 4:24
10 "She's No You" (Matthew Gerrard, Jesse McCartney, Robbie Nevil) Jesse McCartney 3:33
11 "Find Yourself in You" Everlife 3:35
12 "Shining Star" (M. White, P. Bailey, L. Dunn) B5 2:44
13 "I Learned from You" Miley Cyrus & Billy Ray Cyrus 3:26
14 "Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree" (Holiday Edition's bonus track) Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana) 2:22
14 "Nobody's Perfect" (Special Edition's bonus track) Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana) 3:23
[edit] Disc 2 (Music Video DVD)
1 "The Best of Both Worlds" Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana)
2 "Who Said" Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana)
3 "Just like You" Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana)
4 "Pumpin' Up the Party" Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana)
5 "The Other Side of Me" Miley Cyrus (as Hannah Montana)
你可以去看一下原声大碟
《汉娜-蒙塔娜》电视剧主题曲
《汉娜-蒙塔娜》电视剧主题曲是 Best of Both Worlds
好听的英文歌:
My love
As long as you love me
I want it that way
She
Anyone of us
God is a girl
Because of you
It’s my life
Fighter
My happy ending
Hero-Mariah Carey
I will always love you- Whitney Houston
The day you went away
Forever Young
Rhythm Of The Rain
Right Here Waiting
Big big world
Yesterday once more-Carpenters
baby one more time
noboby’s fool
You are not alone
Always Getting Over You
Tomorrow
Amarantine-enya
Somehreats -Carrie Underwood
May it be-enya
take my breath away
Pretty Boy
Just want you to know
When You Tell Me that You Love
I Knew I Loved You-Savage Garden
If you come back-blue
One better
All the thing she said -T.A.T.U
You make me wanna-usher
2 become 1
How Deep Is Your Love-The Bee Gees
Perfect day
long long way to go
Don’t say you love me
everytime
shut up
求汉娜蒙塔娜1-4季全集高清的.最好是百度云或者115的~急!
http://pan.baidu.com/s/1ntokhdv
扩展
谢谢辣(≧∇≦)
谁能告诉我上哪能看或下载完整的汉娜蒙塔娜的电视剧?
现在很多地方的《汉娜蒙塔娜》都被封了!“风行”里的《汉娜蒙塔娜》也被封了!不过在“暴风影音”可以看,下载“暴风影音”后 你在暴风影音里搜索“汉娜 蒙塔娜”就可以搜索出第一部和第四部,或者搜索“孟汉纳”,就可以搜索出第二部和第三部。当你看完第一遍后,要看第二遍的时候,即使不联网也能在暴风影音里看。