Movie Review by Matthew Schuchman
Piercing the hearts of tween girls and love starved mothers, the Twilight series is a hit whether you like it or not. With three tragically hilarious chapters of the film adaptations infecting viewers’ good senses already, part 1 of the split finale is heading to a theater near you. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 is every bit as laughable and mind numbing as the past entries, if not more.
It’s God knows how many weeks later since we left the dysfunctional world of these feuding vampires and werewolves. Edward and Bella are getting ready to throw down their nuptials, and all the main players are in attendance (including characters the writers seem to think the audience is familiar with, but were never introduced to) except triangle love interest, Jacob. Wolfy eventually shows up and gets overly angry and ruins the mood until the newlyweds are off to their honeymoon.
Over a poorly realized 14 days of Edward bruising his wife and destroying a bed or two from his powerful lovemaking, Bella is impregnated. In a situation that no one was even sure could be possible, the baby grows at an alarming rate, putting Bella’s life in danger. Everyone but Bella believes the baby inside her will come out a deranged killing machine, and it puts the peaceful truce between the Cullens and their local wolf pack in jeopardy, as is Bella’s well-being.
Granted, I’m not the target audience for lovesick vampire stories. Still, that doesn’t excuse the pure sense of disregard for the audience’s intelligence this film spews at every corner. In the funniest moment in history since the discovery of laughter, Jacob and his pack meet in wolf form, accompanied by distinctly ridiculous voice-overs (so we can understand what their growls and barks mean) to discuss the murder of the demon child in Bella’s belly. Immediately afterward, Jacob appears, coming out of the woods in clean new duds that he must have stored in his cheeks and dried with his huffing and puffing that was once meant to blow the Cullens’ house down. Who can offer these mad ramblings and expect to be taken seriously?
With dialogue ripped from the addles of absurdity, The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 drives off the cliff in its first minutes and pours on the insanity as the car explodes and rolls down an endless rock face. In the 100-plus years of existing these vampires have suffered through, it’s amazing none of them have heard of one instance where a vampire impregnated a human. Instead, they run around like headless chickens taking guesses as to what could happen or what can be done. The fact that Jacob knew at the opening of the film — the dangers of a vamp shooting his seed in the living — was forgotten the minute he heard what happened, leaving the mystery open to any outcome.
It’s also no help that the introduction of something called “werewolf imprinting” is barely explained to any reasonable extent, yet is used heavily in discussion throughout the movie and turns out to be a major plot point. Thanks for letting the audience in on the important stuff, movie.
As the Harry Potter series progressed, the stories and situations became darker and less childlike. They dealt with death, but deservedly so, in an adult manner. Being aimed at young teens, Twilight has chosen to get bloodier and disturbingly sexual. Though tame by horror standards, the final half-hour of The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 is thoroughly gory and unsettling for the groups of women these stories look to turn on. Fans will forgive the disgusting nature of their beloved Edward and friends, I’m sure, but it will go down as yet another instance of mainstream double-standards.
The safe bet is that The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 will set some box office record and please its loyal fan base. As much as my loathing of this torrid tale of sparkly dead and hairy Native Americans grows in me — as fast and vile as Bella’s demon baby — I can’t help but say I slightly enjoyed myself. This was the funniest film I’ve seen since Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith.
Rating: 1 and a half out of 5 ‘Staches
Great review! I am actually going to see it tonight and am looking forward to bad acting and melodramatic mediocrity, can’t wait!
However there are a few things I need to point out:
1) Imprinting was explained in Eclipse.
2) Jacob was more concerned with Bella being killed than the possibility of impregnation. He was as shocked as well.
3) While impregnating humans had happened in the past, it was more myth than fact, and there was no record of the host ever surviving.
Why do I know all of this? Well I read the books God help me.
Yeah, I am sure they mentioned “Imprinting” in the film as well, but it was so brief and poorly delivered to recall. As for the second point, I agree, but the ambiguity they treat it with in the film makes it feel like he could be referring to either situation (or maybe I just saw it that way since I knew the pregnancy was the plot point).
Thank you though for the added insight and enjoy.
Hahaha, that was review fantastic and reaffirmed my decision to never watch a Twilight movie after seeing the first one. I felt like I was watching a teenage soap opera in a different language because I couldn’t seem to stop my brow from furrowing.
Matthew, you were too kind with your review. I laughed the entire movie, it was soooo bad. I was surprised you didn’t mention the Avatar like ending, with the eyes opening – my sides were aching from all the laughing.
Haha, well, I never want to give away too many details and I thought this one already had too much information for those who don’t know a thing about the plot.
It’s also hard to really pinpoint certain things to poke fun at without getting too wordy (which I already am).
Once the film comes to DVD I will probably revisit it with a point for point attack.
Looking forward to it