30.03.10
The transition from film elements that have made their true formula Sparks: star-crossed sweet with a hint of class disparity (but not non-white character of any consequence); disease connection, revelations and last-minute surprises. "Dear John", directed by Lasse Hallstrom, is higher because there is less of everything, and also because the job has more talent. In this film, Amanda Seyfried and Channing Tatum monkey business of star-crossed lovers, while in "The Last Song" function falls on Ms. Cyrus and Liam Hemsworth, who, despite being an actual deaths are all simply to the task.
Not that it is easy to find the right tone ranting in a film that is full of false sentiments and excited skirmish as a fast food burrito. Ms. Cyrus' character, a graduate school with a strong name Ronnie arrives at his father's beautifully ramshackle beach house on the Georgia coast carrying a little baggage. Dad (Greg Kinnear) and mother (Kelly Preston) are divorced, leaving Ronnie and his youngest of his fellows, Jonah (Bobby Coleman), in some distress.Ronnie, a young girl playing piano since childhood, has abandoned his dreams and his father from Juilliard, and she had some trouble with the law.
Source: New York Times