Madonna: The Confessions Tour
Filmed in its entirety at London's Wembley Arena during her worldwide sold-out 25-city Confessions Tour (2006's top-grossing tour world-wide), this concert film features songs from throughout the queen's career but largely focuses on Confessions On A Dance Floor.
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- Cast:
- Madonna , Stuart Price , Monte Pittman , Donna DeLory , Daniel 'Cloud' Campos , Mihran Kirakosian , Reshma Gajjar
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Reviews
Good concept, poorly executed.
Instead, you get a movie that's enjoyable enough, but leaves you feeling like it could have been much, much more.
Fun premise, good actors, bad writing. This film seemed to have potential at the beginning but it quickly devolves into a trite action film. Ultimately it's very boring.
Actress is magnificent and exudes a hypnotic screen presence in this affecting drama.
This show was so exhausting to watch and there's only two numbers "Drowned World/Substitute for Love" and "Paradise (Not for Me)" where you can sit down and just contemplate it all. The opening of this show will go down in history as the most visually thrilling as Madonna enters the stage via a gigantic Swarovski crystal ball that comes down from the ceiling, and the huge screens from behind it show images of horses galloping. Horses play a role in this show due to Madonna falling off one. The infamous scene with Madonna on the cross is in this show as a huge screen counts to 12 million the number of how many African children are orphaned due to HIV/AIDS. At the end a website address comes up for anyone interested in donating. We then go into the theme of the environment, and again images of politics and religion are shown. There's an interlude and then the show starts again to the music of "I Love New York" and "Ray of Light" this part of the show is one of my favourites with the dancers doing there funny hand movements.Towards the end there's the "Music" number with the song "Disco Inferno" mixed in with the song and the dancers make more of there presence known. The ending again is full of energy as the show wraps up to the tunes of "Lucky Star" and "Hung Up", and hundreds of golden balloons fall from the ceiling at the end the message "Have you confessed?" comes up.The DVD is worth buying, and the soundtrack was added as a bonus.
I love post-Evita Madonna. From Ray Of Light and onward, she's been on a wonderfully intriguing musical path. Loving the Confessions album and its fabulous sleeve, I was excited to watch this live (but heavily visually-edited) recording of a London performance of the Confessions Tour. It was a tour that Madonna herself was openly intent on making the world into one big dance floor. But if this show was any indication, the dance stuff kind of takes a backseat for awhile.The first half of the show, and in particular how it opens, is very bizarre, almost off-putting. It begins with these clips of horses, and Madonna dressed like a very fancy jockey. This segues into the first performance, that of "Future Lovers", which has a theme of love taming people like those horses. Then it segues into very religious and/or humanitarian stuff (the infamous crucified Madonna), and it's quite off-putting. I know Madonna cares about meaning and such, but at times, the first half of the show is unbearably preachy (not counting the rather awesome dancers' confessions and the remix to "Sorry").Stick with the show, however, because halfway through is when things get really good. The preachy stuff is gone as Madonna emerges in full rock get-up and delivers a stunning rendition of "I Love New York", ending in a crazy guitar solo. Next comes a rocking version of "Ray of Light", and then she cuts loose. With "Let It Will Be", she goes totally crazy, with energy amazing for a then-48-year-old.The last quarter of the show is when the dance atmosphere is put into high gear, beginning with "Music Inferno", mixing Disco Inferno with Madonna's own hit "Music". Half of it is her dancers doing amazing rollerskating feats before emerging herself in full-on Saturday Night Fever get-up and truly taking her place as Queen of the Dance Floor. It segues then into a hauntingly beautiful new version of "Erotica", before striding on towards the thunderous finale.This is an excellent show, Madonna's reputation as a perfectionist shows and the second half is utterly brilliant. But it very much feels like two different shows, even visually. The first half of the show is very bizarre and off-puttingly religious and/or preachy, but the second half is bombastic, full of energy and passion. I wish the entire show had been like the second half.
Years ago, with "Ray of Light," Madonna broke through to a truly amazing level of musical artistry, and since then she's occasionally transcended even her own standards. This concert production, with its hypnotic editing, amazing dancing, hallucinatory lighting effects, and trance-inducing arrangements, blows away all previous efforts. Madonna's apparent ambition -- to single-handedly bring about world peace through music and dance -- may seem hubristic or absurd to some. But hell, somebody's got to do it! Thanks to her assemblage of the remarkable talent of everyone involved in this production, "Confessions Tour Live from London" places her once again among the top ten artists working anywhere in the world in any medium.
As I watch Madonna on TV I'm shaking my head. The camera director must be on something. The cameras kept changing every few seconds. It was making me dizzy. Madonna's songs had that same beat. I liked her MTV videos a lot better. The scene was dark. In the beginning of her show, what's up with the horses? That's just the first hour. The special effects were redundant. It's all flashy. I just want to see Madonna sing her songs. I didn't know she could play the guitar. Or is she actually playing it. I have two more lines to write. That's the minimum. All I wanted to write is about the camera shots. Just saw the camera aimed at her gyrating hips, again. This is my tenth line. Excuse my ranting and raving.