Starring: Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattison, Billy Burke, Peter Facinelli, Elizabeth Reaser, Nikki Reed, Ashley Greene, Jackson Rathbone
Director: Catherine Hardwicke
Writser: Melissa Rosenberg, Stephenie Meyer
Executive Producer: Michael Iperato
Producers: Mark Morgan, Greg Mooriadian, Wyck Godfrey
Genre: Drama, Fantasy, Romance
Rating: MPAA – PG-13 for some violence and a scene of sensuality
Distributor: Summit Entertainment
Twilight
,
a teen drama with vampires brimming with angst, was rather
entertaining due to how awful and ridiculous it was. It made little
sense, it was riddled with flaws, and the acting and dialogue were
just plain bad. If it were not for these hilarious issues and the
horde of cheering and screaming teenage girls it would have been a
total waste of time. Instead, it was just mostly a waste of time.
The
story follows Isabella/Bella Swan (Stewart), an emotionally charged
teenager who is overly dramatic. Her seemingly terrible life goes
from bad to worse when she is sent to live with her dad in a small,
eerie town called Forks. As the film progresses, she slowly learns
that this rainy town is home to vampires. One vampire of note is
Edward (Pattinson), the sexy, quiet, and fidgety love interest.
Edward and Bella fall in love, and are met with hurdles and
challenges. They spend the film hoping love will conquer all rather
than working on practical solutions to their difficulty. The
challenges consist of the usual disapproving parents, overcoming
differences in lifestyle and, of course, vampire battles.
I
would like to note that the vampires introduced in this film do not
fall under the classic definition of vampire. They do not need human
blood to survive and they can go out in the sun. As well, they do not
age, can run super fast, are super strong, and each one possesses
their own unique power. Although it is not how I know vampires to be,
this is not an issue because this is the world that Stephenie Meyer
constructed and nowhere is it written that vampires must follow a
certain code.
The
acting in the movie was, for the most part, extremely poor. I say for
the most part because they were all bad aside from Kristen Stewart,
who was marginally better, but nothing too great. As well, the
dialogue was awful and extremely cheesy. Most of the lines in the
film felt forced and unnatural. It was almost as though the actors
did not like the lines they were given.
However,
it is the blatant flaws in this movie that really bothered me. First
off, the physics were absolutely ridiculous. When the vampires
jumped, their path of motion did not follow the appropriate parabolic
curve. When they ran, their bodies moved faster than their legs, and
they somehow managed to climb monstrous trees with ease. Furthermore,
there was a scene where an apple falls off a table, hits Edward’s
foot and is kicked back up into his hands. The speed of the apple as
it fell and rose is constant, rather than accelerating and
decelerating under the effects of gravity as any high school physics
student would know. Then again, considering the crowd at the theater,
I don’t think anyone would have noticed. The producers should have
invested more money in the effects department, rather than the
ridiculous screen writer.

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Ludicrous
physics aside, there were other issues that made little sense as
well. Edward is supposed to be gorgeous, but he is not, at least in
my opinion. The school was seemingly packed with students when the
town had only roughly 3,000 inhabitants. The boys that Bella
encountered in school flocked to her as if she was a goddess, but the
movie never explains why. The vampires, as Edward pointed out during
the film, are supposed to “sparkle” in the sun, but it just
looked like they were sweating. At one point Edward sneaks into
Bella’s room, and she is not concerned. Why is it that when Edward
breaks into a girl’s room it’s cool, but when I do it it’s a
felony? Also, it seems as though the vampires have been living in
this town for over a hundred years, so how are the inhabitants not
suspicious of them? What really threw me though, was the scene in
which Bella gets bitten by James (Gigandet), the nemesis vampire who
spends the majority of the movie trying to kill her. First off, the
movie never explains why James goes through so much trouble to get
her. Second, in order to save her, Edward seemingly bites on the
wound in an attempt to stop the effect of James’ bite. But if
Edward bit her should she not still be infected? The very fact of him
biting her would have just added to the infection. In other words, if
a venomous animal bites you, do you make another venomous animal bite
you in order to reverse the effects of the venom? Of course not!
Most
of these issues, I realize, are due to the fact that I never read the
novel that this movie is based on, and that is exactly the point. I
went into this movie knowing nothing of the story and left totally
confused. Movies should be accessible to all, but this one was not.
This one was for the fans, for the people who knew the story already.
However,
there were a few things about this film that I did enjoy. First, the
art direction was great. The grey and green color scheme accentuated
the emotional and dramatic tone of the film. Second, it was rather
cute. I could not help but smile at how adorable it was when Edward
and Isabella ended up together. Aside from these two points though,
the movie had not much else going for it.
Throughout
the film I could not help but think that the entire movie was a
euphemism for sex. If you were to replace the vampires with raging
teen hormones, it would actually work very well. In fact, if they
were to replace the vampires, and brush up the acting and dialogue,
they might be left with a half decent film. Instead we are left with
a heavily flawed teen drama with vampires that only the fans can
appreciate.