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Actors:
Madonna, Pedro Almodóvar, Antonio Banderas, Warren Beatty,
Sandra Bernhard, Luis Camacho |
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Norman Mailer may have come up with the
title Advertisements for Myself, but in this case, Madonna is the one
who really wrote the book. Truth or Dare, an engaging behind-the-scenes
look at the pop star's Blonde Ambition tour, is a feature-film advertisement
for herself that Roger Ebert cleverly dubbed "an authorized invasion
of privacy." How much of it is calculated and how much of it is genuine,
what Madonna chooses to reveal about herself and what she actually reveals
in the process, are up to the viewer to decide. Patterned in part after
the classic D.A. Pennebaker documentary of Bob Dylan Don't Look Back,
the black-and-white sections of Truth or Dare offer glimpses into her
offstage life, while excerpts from the show are seen in color. Madonna's
relationship with her father and brother, the maternal control she wields
over her dancers, her giggly friendship with Sandra Bernhard, her crush
on Antonio Banderas (later to become her costar in the movie version of
Evita), the waning days of her relationship with Warren Beatty (who accuses
her of wanting to exist only for the camera)--all of it becomes self-conscious
fodder for a fascinating examination of modern pop stardom. --Jim Emerson
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