logo
‘Something Beautiful with Miley Cyrus' Review: The Star Co-Directs an Album's Worth of Music Videos, Celebrating Her Sexuality…and Herself

‘Something Beautiful with Miley Cyrus' Review: The Star Co-Directs an Album's Worth of Music Videos, Celebrating Her Sexuality…and Herself

Yahoo13 hours ago

It's the rare pop star who doesn't use his or her sexuality in some way. But the current moment, typified by stars like Chappell Roan, Sabrina Carpenter, and Charli XCX, tends to be about showcasing one's sexuality ironically, or with an acid flippancy, or from behind a mask, or with a certain cool stance of meta control.
Miley Cyrus never got that memo. In 'Something Beautiful,' a 55-minute visual album made up of music videos, co-directed by Cyrus (with Jacob Bixenman and Brendan Walter), of the 13 tracks from her just-released album, Cyrus struts and pouts and lets it out, she throws her body around like a gymnastic weapon, and in a way she throws her beauty around, as though she were trying to sear the power of her erotic presence into our souls.
More from Variety
'Titan: The OceanGate Disaster' Review: Netflix Doc Depicts High-End Deep Sea Exploration With a Lethal Price Tag
'Rosemead' Review: Lucy Liu's Revelatory Turn Is the Reason to See an Otherwise Downbeat Family Drama
Michael Imperioli on Jack Kerouac, Buddhism and a Changing New York: 'I Still Love the City to Death'
At the Tribeca Festival, where the 'Something Beautiful' visual album premiered tonight, the audience cheered every femme fatale glower, every showgirl flash of writhing flesh, every doffed piece of slinky punk designer clothing. It was clear that Cyrus staged the videos not merely as an orgy of rock-star self-love but as an homage to an era when the flaunting of sexuality was something that people felt less cautious about. She wants to take us back to the age of letting it rip.
Miley Cyrus is pre-ironic, and so is her music, which is hooky in a heavily produced big-beat way that's starting to sound as from-another-era as Springsteen's. (To me, that's not an insult.) In the 'Something Beautiful' videos, you feel her trying to elevate her erotic maximalism into a kind of mythology. In 'Easy Lover,' she strips down to her underwear in a soundstage dressing room, then walks onto an empty Hollywood lot wearing light-blue ruffled chaps and a winged jacket, sauntering through that land of make-believe as if to say, 'What you're seeing is just…an image!' (Well, yes.) In 'Golden Burning Sun,' one of the catchier songs on the album, she's photographed in profile, wearing giant sunglasses as she rides a chopper against a stylized orange sky, singing, 'You're the only one, under the golden burning sun.' For all the independent spirit that defined 'Flowers,' and at a moment when Sabrina Carpenter's 'Manchild' is being touted as a potential iconic summer hit, Miley Cyrus's ardent anthems can sound as old-school devotional as something from the 1980s.
And, in fact, there's an '80s nostalgia hanging over the entire visual album. It's very 'Flashdance' meets Lita Ford. There is much windblown hair, and the video for 'Walk of Fame' opens on a rhythm track highly reminiscent of Bronski Beat's 'Smalltown Boy,' as we see Miley, in a little silver dress, strutting in the middle of the night along the abandoned but highly lit-up-by-street-lights-and-store-windows Hollywood Boulevard. You keep expecting Mia Goth to show up with a knife, but Cyrus is the only one there, and does she ever work it, bending and writhing over those stars on the Walk of Fame. Here, as in several of the other videos, I kept feeling as if one of those cliché fashion photographers must be hovering off-camera, saying, 'Yes, that's it! Show me what you got!'
And then we arrive at 'Every Girl You've Ever Loved,' which feels like the climax to the visual album. It's set in an empty warehouse loft, with light shooting through propeller fans (very Adrian Lyne), and with Miley, in her primal assertion of feminine power, joined by Naomi Campbell, the two of them obliterating the need for anyone else. (The only dude in these videos is someone who shows up in the last one, looking like a Calvin Klein model as shot by Kenneth Anger.)
At the premiere, a journalist sitting next to me said, 'There's no narrative here at all.' Given that 'Something Beautiful' was presented as a Tribeca Festival event, I think what she was hoping to see was a visual album that tried for something along the lines of Beyoncé's 'Lemonade.' 'Something Beautiful' is very much not that. Yet if the videos, with their confectionary nod to the eros of celebrity, lack any semblance of a storytelling through line, I wouldn't say that means they have no narrative. They tell the story of Miley Cyrus's relationship to sexuality and stardom.
As an adult pop star, she has always borne a striking resemblance to the Faye Dunaway of the early '70s, but she's like Faye Dunaway without the mystery. Yet in 'Something Beautiful,' with the songs used as catwalk tracks, you see how Miley Cyrus, in elevating her erotic aura, is trying to be a performer of mystery — to let her beauty singe our eyeballs, to let it vibrate into the cosmos. Yet it's all a little insular. The final song, the video of which plays over the end credits, is called 'Give Me Love,' and it feels like the whole film could have been called that. We're the audience for Miley Cyrus's sex-power rapture. But we're also the mirror she's looking into.
Best of Variety
The Best Albums of the Decade

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

5 shows like 'Big Mouth' on Netflix to stream now that the animated show is over
5 shows like 'Big Mouth' on Netflix to stream now that the animated show is over

Tom's Guide

timean hour ago

  • Tom's Guide

5 shows like 'Big Mouth' on Netflix to stream now that the animated show is over

Netflix recently released the final season of the hit animated show 'Big Mouth," serving up one last crudely hilarious deluge of puberty jokes and high school drama. Nick, Andrew, Jessi, Missy, Jay, and Matthew are all growing up — both inside and out — and the series continues to embrace the messy, awkward and deeply weird process of adolescence. And now that the last episode has dropped, 'Big Mouth' fans might find themselves itching to fill the hormone-fueled void with another favorite adult animated binge. Here are five shows like "Big Mouth," all of which you can stream on Netflix. The creators of 'Big Mouth' (comedian Nick Kroll and showrunner Andrew Goldberg) saw how successful their first series had become and launched a spin-off in 2022 featuring a new cast of emotional 'monsters.' This time, the setting is an HR department, which brings some refreshing office humour to what could've been a staid backdrop. SNL alum Aidy Bryant personifies Emmy the Lovebug, the key character driving the story of 'Human Resources." She struggles to identify with her first client, Becca, a pregnant lawyer with various shades of depression. Randall Park voices Pete the Logic Rock, who is as stoic as his name and often acts awkward in any interaction, but he begins to open up as the seasons progress. And comedian Maria Bamford brings her unique voice to Tito the Anxiety Mosquito, who often chills with Depression Kitties, as you would expect. Segueing from 'Big Mouth' to 'Human Resources' is as easy as diving into 'Better Call Saul' after 'Breaking Bad,' and the tight writing and complex themes around self-actualization will be familiar ground for B'ig Mouth' veterans — especially those who would love a cameo or two from Maury the Hormone Monster. Watch on Netflix Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. The five-season show, which ended in 2021, is the brainchild of stand-up star Bill Burr, and it's one of the more realistic animated shows on the list. Set in the 1970s and inspired by Burr's own family experiences, the show gives viewers a raw portrayal of a dysfunctional family navigating generational clashes and financial quagmires. With the father being a perpetually angry guy, Bill Burr afficionados will see many themes cropping up from the comedian's popular stand-up bits. But 'F is for Family' allows Burr to explore deeper probes into the, say, father-son dynamic that he rarely discusses on stage. You'll also notice an A-list cast of actors lending their voices to the series, from Laura Dern to Sam Rockwell to Justin Long. Watch on Netflix The biggest criticism this show gets is that Coach Ben (voiced by Jack Johnson, also the creator) is an unlikable character, but to each their own, right? If you can get past this issue, you'll likely enjoy this fun show about a high school basketball coach overwhelmed by his own ego. Believing he's destined for coaching greatness, Ben is obsessed with recruiting a seven-foot student with no interest in basketball, which is the main arc of the show, except for bits about his thorny relationship with his wife and battling Principal Opal. 'Hoops' only lasted one season (did the vulgarity turn off Netflix in the end?), but it's still an engaging watch whether or not you've come across a disillusioned coach like Ben. Watch on Netflix Lasting five seasons before Netflix axed it, 'Disenchantment' has the same animation style as 'Futurama' and 'The Simpsons' thanks to creator Matt Groening, who brought us Homer, Marge and Bart eons ago. Set in a fictional Medieval country, the series stars Princess Tiabeanie (Abbi Jacobson) revolting against her parents' plans to marry Prince Merkime (Matt Berry), but she only has eyes for Elfo (Nat Faxon), a naïve and lovesick elf. It doesn't always hit the same comedic notes as Groening's other popular shows, but it's fair to call 'Disenchantment' charming and digestible. It's also a great watch for family viewing if your children are pre-teens or older, as this series doesn't boast the same crude jokes as 'Human Resources' and 'Hoops.' Another strong anchor of the show is Luci (Eric Andre) who is a demon acting as the princess's lovable but scheming companion. He also often has the best lines: 'Being evil is a lot of work. You gotta tempt, you gotta corrupt, you gotta convince people to do bad stuff. It's exhausting.' Watch on Netflix Without a doubt, 'BoJack Horseman' is one of the more popular animated shows on Netflix for being a mature and smart look at mental health, intergenerational trauma and addiction. All this from a cast of characters with names like Mr. Peanutbutter and Pinky Penguin. As the titular character falls into a depression after realizing his career as a professor is a far cry from his early days as an actor on the show "Horsin' Around," we see a range of storylines about BoJack finding validation in one-night stands, recovering from his traumatic upbringing, and reconnecting with someone from his past he never thought was alive (don't worry, we won't spoil it here). Starring Will Arnett, Paul F. Tompkins, Amy Sedaris and Aaron Paul, the show is punchy and confident, and the writing is tight and at turns beautiful. It truly should've won more Emmy Awards. Rest assured, you won't look at how we view fame and self-worth the same when 'BoJack' is done with you. Watch on Netflix

Miley Cyrus boasts of having a more impressive squad than Taylor Swift
Miley Cyrus boasts of having a more impressive squad than Taylor Swift

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Miley Cyrus boasts of having a more impressive squad than Taylor Swift

Miley Cyrus has insisted she has a more impressive 'squad' than pop contemporary Taylor Swift. The 32-year-old claims she called up her most famous friends to convince them to star in a music video with her in 2013 - only for her record label to cancel the plan. Cyrus insists the video would prove she has more impressive contacts than fellow singer Swift, 35, who pulled together a lineup of A-List friends for her Bad Blood music video in 2015. The Flowers singer told the Every Single Album podcast, "I had everyone already lined up. Nelly ... Madonna was down to do the video, Miranda Cosgrove." She went on, "This was before Taylor had a lot of famous people in her crew. I was friends with famous people first. I wanted to do that. I had a f-king squad, and my squad was very, very cool." The music video in question would have been for a track called 4x4 from her 2013 album Bangerz - which was never actually released as a single. Cyrus claims, "Madonna was down to mud wrestle with Miranda Kerr. I was like, 'I'm gonna get all these girls, all these supermodels, all these Victoria's Secret models and all of these pop icons to come to my dad's farm, get in the back of 4x4s, and we're gonna mud wrestle, and we're gonna go out and do doughnuts." Swift called on friends including Selena Gomez, Zendaya, Karlie Kloss, Cindy Crawford and more for her own chart-topping single - famously penned following her alleged fall-out with Katy Perry.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store