©!nful
Nov 22nd, 2008, 03:43 AM
Three months ago, filming began on a Britney Spears documentary in which she would open up about the troubles surrounding her celebrity, her failed marriage to Kevin Federline and the rebuilding of her career as a lead-up to the release of her upcoming album "Circus." The project was finished last week.
MTV along with Spears' longtime manager Larry Rudolph screened half an hour of footage from the special for the press Thursday night in Santa Monica. It's no "Chaotic."
The first scene took place on the day Spears' latest comeback began, the day she'd take home a trio of her first-ever VMA awards. That morning her dad, Jamie Spears, prepared her favorite breakfast, Velveeta cheese grits.
At one point, Spears is asked by the filmmaker if she thinks her life is weird. "Do I think my life is weird? (Laughs) It's all I've ever known. I don't see it as weird."
But at all hours the star is shown flanked by her team, which includes Rudolph, her father, another manager, her personal assistant, bodyguards and any number of various hangers-on. She entertains her entourage by doing impressions of her dad, and gets pumped while recording tracks for her album and shooting a music video.
Most of the time, however, Spears is shown looking sullen, quiet, even disconnected. On the way to the VMAs, she's concerned about whether MTV will show footage of last year's botched comeback (the network did not). She reveals to the filmmaker that her trust has been "battered" and that she's "grown up big time." Tears well up in her eyes when she talks about how feeling lonely led to poor decisions with major consequences. "I'm sad," she says finally before bursting into tears.
If the past two years revealed Britney as a star who had lost her footing, MTV’s documentary shows Spears as a mother of two working to find her way -- even while she talks about wanting a different life. Rudolph explained to us why she continues to pursue a career in the spotlight:
MTV along with Spears' longtime manager Larry Rudolph screened half an hour of footage from the special for the press Thursday night in Santa Monica. It's no "Chaotic."
The first scene took place on the day Spears' latest comeback began, the day she'd take home a trio of her first-ever VMA awards. That morning her dad, Jamie Spears, prepared her favorite breakfast, Velveeta cheese grits.
At one point, Spears is asked by the filmmaker if she thinks her life is weird. "Do I think my life is weird? (Laughs) It's all I've ever known. I don't see it as weird."
But at all hours the star is shown flanked by her team, which includes Rudolph, her father, another manager, her personal assistant, bodyguards and any number of various hangers-on. She entertains her entourage by doing impressions of her dad, and gets pumped while recording tracks for her album and shooting a music video.
Most of the time, however, Spears is shown looking sullen, quiet, even disconnected. On the way to the VMAs, she's concerned about whether MTV will show footage of last year's botched comeback (the network did not). She reveals to the filmmaker that her trust has been "battered" and that she's "grown up big time." Tears well up in her eyes when she talks about how feeling lonely led to poor decisions with major consequences. "I'm sad," she says finally before bursting into tears.
If the past two years revealed Britney as a star who had lost her footing, MTV’s documentary shows Spears as a mother of two working to find her way -- even while she talks about wanting a different life. Rudolph explained to us why she continues to pursue a career in the spotlight: