NEW YORK, NY.- Beyoncés 56-show Renaissance World Tour ended over the weekend without the release of any much-anticipated visual component tied to the singers shimmering 2022 dance album. Beyoncé, however, may have had a plan all along: Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé will be released in movie theaters Dec. 1, the singer announced Monday, immediately following the tours final show in Kansas City, Missouri.
Be careful what you ask for, cause I just might comply, Beyoncé whose two previous solo releases, her 2013 self-titled album and Lemonade, from 2016, were billed as visual albums wrote on Instagram, quoting the Renaissance song All Up in Your Mind.
The singer has previously released concert films, documentaries and extravagant music video collections via DVD (I Am
Yours, 2009), HBO (Life Is but a Dream, 2013, and Lemonade, 2016) and Netflixs streaming service (Homecoming, 2019). But the release of the Renaissance film to theaters around the country follows a similar strategy deployed by Taylor Swift, who headlined the summers other culture-dominating blockbuster tour, and whose Eras Tour concert film is due out in theaters Oct. 13.
The two headliners are estimated to have generated more than $9 billion in economic activity combined, with each tour nearly matching the revenues of the Beijing Olympics in 2008, after adjusting for inflation.
The Renaissance film will track the tours journey from its opening in Stockholm in May to its finale Oct. 1. It is about Beyoncés intention, hard work, involvement in every aspect of the production, her creative mind and purpose to create her legacy and master her craft, according to an announcement. Tickets are on sale now.
When I am performing, I am nothing but free, Beyoncé says in the trailer. My goal for this tour was to create a place where everyone is free, and no one is judged. The preview also includes behind-the-scenes footage of the singer rehearsing with her daughter Blue Ivy Carter, who performed on the tour, and interacting with her husband, Jay-Z, and the couples young twins.
Writing in The New York Times upon the tours North American beginning, critic Lindsay Zoladz said, The shows look as projected in diamond-sharp definition onto a panoramic screen conjured Fritz Langs Metropolis by way of the 1990 drag ball documentary Paris Is Burning. Critic Wesley Morris, writing about the album, a tribute to Black and queer dance music, said of Beyoncé: The range of her voice nears the galactic; the imagination powering it qualifies as cinema.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.