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Plain Dealer File Photo

So while the Hannah Montana tickets have been soooo hard to get, it not looks like the movie tickets for the Feb 1st showing of the Best of Both Worlds tour movie are just as hot. They are already selling out in places like Cleveland and I am sure other places are going to follow. The “Hannah Montana & Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert” movie opens nationwide Friday, Feb. 1, and plays for only one week. You can buy the tickets online at www.Fandango.com or from a local theater in your area. Let us know if you get to make it to the movie and how it is!

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Hannah Montana Pictures - Celebrity bloopers here

Just a fun Hannah Montana Photo Video!

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Look out everyone! It’s coming to a theater near you on Feb 1st, 2008 for a special 1-week engagement on the big screen!

Hannah Montana fans everywhere will have a chance to see their favorite singer, songwriter and actress, Miley Cyrus, perform her sold-out concert tour on the big screen in HANNAH MONTANA & MILEY CYRUS: BEST OF BOTH WORLDS CONCERT. Shot during Cyrus’ 69-city tour and exhibited in state-of-the-art Disney Digital 3D™, the film will be coming to theaters for a special one week engagement on February 1, 2008. Woo Hoo!!!

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Singer Billy Ray Cyrus wants his daughter’s “Hannah Montana” film to be shot in Tennessee, but state officials say they might not be able to offer producers enough financial incentives. The film, based on the popular Disney TV series, is scheduled to start shooting in April. In the series, 14-year-old Miley Cyrus plays a high school student, Miley Stewart, who moves from Tennessee to California and lives a secret double life as a pop star

Billy Ray Cyrus plays her father. Cyrus said the movie is centered on the fictional Stewart family’s return to Tennessee and it is only fitting for it to be shot in Tennessee. The real-life Cyrus family also has a home in Tennessee and was in town for Thanksgiving during a break on Miley Cyrus’ sold-out tour, which comes to Cleveland Thursday, Jan. 3. Perry Gibson of the Tennessee Film, Entertainment and Music Commission said the state could benefit from having the movie shot locally, but the state is limited in what incentives it can offer.

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