Hannah Montana: The Movie

    Hannah Montana: The Movie
    2009

    Synopsis

    When Miley Stewart (aka pop-star Hannah Montana) gets too caught up in the superstar celebrity lifestyle, her dad decides it's time for a total change of scenery. But sweet niblets! Miley must trade in all the glitz and glamour of Hollywood for some ol' blue jeans on the family farm in Tennessee, and question if she can be both Miley Stewart and Hannah Montana.

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    Cast

    • Miley CyrusMiley Stewart / Hannah Montana
    • Billy Ray CyrusRobby Stewart
    • Emily OsmentLilly Truscott
    • Lucas TillTravis Brody
    • Jason EarlesJackson Stewart
    • Margo MartindaleRuby
    • Melora HardinLorelai
    • Mitchel MussoOliver Oken
    • Moisés AriasRico Suave
    • Taylor SwiftTaylor Swift

    Recommendations

    • 75

      Philadelphia Inquirer

      Handles the strained daddy/daughter bond with sufficient lightness and laughs so that fathers won't mind accompanying their spawn.
    • 70

      Variety

      A goofily endearing romp that might even lasso a few new fans.
    • 63

      Premiere

      If you are a big fan of country music, you will enjoy it for the Taylor Swift, Rascal Flatts, Billy Ray Cyrus and of course, Miley Cyrus performances.
    • 60

      The Hollywood Reporter

      There are sufficient pratfalls and Miley/Hannah quick-changes to satisfy the fans, while Cyrus retains that natural, unforced likability that made her a star in the first place.
    • 60

      New York Daily News

      Like 2003's "Lizzie McGuire" movie, "Hannah" breaks little new ground but makes the big screen shift with liveliness and sense of humor impressively intact.
    • 60

      Los Angeles Times

      In the end, Hannah Montana: The Movie is big, beautiful, a little boring and utterly safe. There are flashes of inspiration -- the "Hoedown Throwdown" dance, the scenes between Martindale and the Cyruses -- but it also is what it is: Miley Cyrus' next big step.
    • 50

      L.A. Weekly

      It's almost foolish to review Hannah Montana: The Movie as anything other than the latest cog in a cultural phenomenon/mass-marketing juggernaut. The film itself certainly doesn't aspire to anything more.
    • 50

      Chicago Tribune

      I like the end-credits sequence best, which has nothing to do with hoary complications or the miseries of stardom or the magical spellbinding powers of a cheap wig.

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