I can't help it. I'm excited about this....
However, I am NOT excited about this...
Robert Pattinson ... Edward Cullen
Ashley Greene ... Alice Cullen
Peter Facinelli ... Dr. Carlisle Cullen
Nikki Reed ... Rosalie Hale
Jackson Rathbone ... Jasper Hale
Dakota Fanning ... Jane
I did NOT like Nikki Reed as Rosalie. Her acting was fine. But the most beautiful woman in the world? NOT. EVEN. CLOSE.
And no cast choice disappointed me more than Alice's (Ashley Greene). The worst acting in the entire Twilight movie (and that's saying a LOT). I really hope she has taken some acting lessons since Twilight. She has the look, but she blew it as soon as she spoke.
I am bummed about Robert Pattinson as Edward. I guess it would have been a stretch to change the actor at this juncture (although they pulled it off with Batman, like four times!). It's not that he's a bad actor. But he pulled some really weird faces in Twilight. The bigger problem is that he's just NOT good looking enough. Or manly enough. Or buff enough. My husband, who, bless his soul, brought home Twilight to watch the other day--OF HIS OWN FREE WILL AND ACCORD, with no suggestion from me--said right off the bat about Edward, "Could they have picked anyone faggier?" I think they could have. I can think of a few faggier choices. But Robert Pattinson just doesn't cut it in my book. Hopefully he'll stop being so brooding in this movie (what little he's in it.)
I could NOT buy Peter Facinelli as Carlisle. He was handsome enough. But he looked about 20 years old! Just way too young to be a doctor. Unless this is a sequel of Doogey Houser M.D. I wish they had changed him. He had such a small role that no one would have minded, I'm sure.
Jackson Rathbone did a fabulous impression of Edward Scissorhands in Twilight. Unfortunately, not so good as Jasper. Stiff, mechanical, robotic, blank-faced....YACK! And since he said maybe 5 words during the whole movie, I know he would not have been missed. Why, oh WHY did they keep him??
And finally we come to the most puzzling choice for the New Moon cast. Dakota Fanning as Jane???? Um, Dakota Fanning turns 15 this year. Did anyone get the impression from New Moon that Jane--powerful, vicious, cold-hearted vixen--was 15? And a cutesy blond? How they are going to pull THAT one off is beyond me.
I am, however, pleased to see a few people back: I really liked all the high school friends' actors. They're keepers. I liked the choice for Charlie, I liked Jacob, I liked Emmett and Victoria and Laurant. And I even liked Bella. There was a bit more stuttering and sighing than I thought necessary, but I thought overall that Kristen Stewart did a good job.
I'm also excited to see what director Chris Weitz (Director of About a Boy, American Pie and The Golden Compass) will do with it. I think the directing was one of the biggest problems with Twilight. Hopefully Chris can pull some better performances out of Jasper and Alice. (And let's all pray that the budget is big enough to make the special effects less absurd.)
What about you guys? Any thoughts on these actors, the upcoming movie, or your expectations for how this second book in the set will turn out on film?
Showing posts with label Twilight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twilight. Show all posts
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Monday, October 13, 2008
No Apologies

This isn't a popularity contest. Despite what I've said before about wanting everyone to love me, and the contests and giveaways I do, and all the widgets on my side bar to track who comes to my blog. Really, it's not about popularity. Ok, it is. But today I'm not going to try to please anyone. I'm not going to try to fit in with the Twilight haters. And I'm not going to try to schmooze the Twihards. I just want to put my thoughts out there about the Twilight series, which I finished at 2am last night. Feel free to voice your opinion afterward (but only if you aren't going to hate me if my opinion is so much more RIGHT than yours).
Dedication: I'd like to dedicate this post to all the people who contributed to my reading Twilight. First, to all my friends who didn't hate me while I kept my nose in the air and refused to read it. Tiburon, for convincing me it might be worth a read, Jennie for having an opinion I knew I could trust, Nicki for lending me New Moon, Kati for lending me Breaking Dawn, and Cara for being someone I could bash the worst parts of Twilight with. Also, I want to thank my husband and kids who didn't divorce me when I was reading non-stop a couple of times and didn't do crap other than that all day.
Preface: I resisted reading Twilight as long as I could. First of all, the premise didn't seem that appealing to me. Vampires? In high school? Secondly, the target audience was supposed to be teenagers, which also made me shrink from this book. I read a LOT of bad adolescent literature as a middle/high school English teacher. And I just wasn't up for a 4 book series where vampire tales were hopefully going to carry me through 3000 pages of bad writing. Plus, I HATE to jump on a bandwagon and do what everyone else is doing just because everyone else is doing it. But, on a road trip from Portland, I ran out of things to do. I had hours and hours AND HOURS to kill in the car. And the sister in law I was staying with had just started the newly released Breaking Dawn and swore the books were good. So I picked up Twilight at Target that night and started reading.
Dedication: I'd like to dedicate this post to all the people who contributed to my reading Twilight. First, to all my friends who didn't hate me while I kept my nose in the air and refused to read it. Tiburon, for convincing me it might be worth a read, Jennie for having an opinion I knew I could trust, Nicki for lending me New Moon, Kati for lending me Breaking Dawn, and Cara for being someone I could bash the worst parts of Twilight with. Also, I want to thank my husband and kids who didn't divorce me when I was reading non-stop a couple of times and didn't do crap other than that all day.
Preface: I resisted reading Twilight as long as I could. First of all, the premise didn't seem that appealing to me. Vampires? In high school? Secondly, the target audience was supposed to be teenagers, which also made me shrink from this book. I read a LOT of bad adolescent literature as a middle/high school English teacher. And I just wasn't up for a 4 book series where vampire tales were hopefully going to carry me through 3000 pages of bad writing. Plus, I HATE to jump on a bandwagon and do what everyone else is doing just because everyone else is doing it. But, on a road trip from Portland, I ran out of things to do. I had hours and hours AND HOURS to kill in the car. And the sister in law I was staying with had just started the newly released Breaking Dawn and swore the books were good. So I picked up Twilight at Target that night and started reading.
Chapter 1- Twilight - I have to admit, I was pleasantly surprised by this book. Ya, there were some juvenile details of clothing and high school conversation I could have lived without. But Stephanie Meyer quickly proved she knew how to do two things really well: keep you on the edge of your seat, and create a connection between the main characters that was almost tangible. I was hooked within about 3 chapters and read almost non-stop for a day and a half. I was so affected by the strange relationship between Edward and Bella, so drawn in by his confusing behavior and their undeniable attraction to one another, despite all sense and reason, that I couldn't stop reading. I seriously felt this emotional pull between them. It was weird. I can't remember being affected by a book that way. Then, when James showed up and the plot abruptly changed to a heart-pounding thriller, I was taken aback. I hadn't seen that coming. And of course I couldn't put the book down then either. So somewhere around Twin Falls I finished. And I had to admit (to myself only. I wasn't ready to join the fan club yet) that the book was good. Definitely good.
Chapter 2 - New Moon- I heard a lot of negative comments about New Moon before I ever read any of the Twilight series. And then again when I was ready to start it. I was pretty well briefed about the fact that Edward was not in most of the book. I was warned that it was hard to get through. And so my expectations were quite low. However, I was pleasantly surprised by this book as well. Maybe knowing that Edward was gone through most of it kept me from being disappointed or worrying about whether he would come back. But I actually enjoyed seeing Bella become friends with Jacob. There was something so healthy about their relationship, so real. Not like the fairy tale, love at first sight, dreamy romance of Edward that made no sense. This made sense. This was the kind of relationship that people really have who live happily ever after. So I liked it. I also could really relate to the numbness, the sadness, the hole she talked about inside herself. I had a relationship--bad for me like hers, addictive like hers--that made me feel that way when it ended. And the author--at least to me--did such a good job of painting Bella's grief that I really felt it along with her. But the thing I think I liked best about New Moon was that Bella stopped being so weak and pathetic. Ya, I get it that her weak and pathetic personality is a foil (see how my English minor is actually coming in handy now?) for Edward's perfection. And I get that it makes us be able to relate to her more when she doesn't have it all together. But I kind of got sick of the constant falling, tripping, and never figuring out what was going on in the plot when it was obvious. So I liked her crazy stunts, her recklessness. I liked seeing her have some pep to her personality. And then, of course, the Volturi part at the end was nice and exiting.
Chapter 3 - Eclipse- This was definitely my least favorite of the books. It was the first one that took me weeks to get through instead of days. In fact, I had to force myself through parts of it. The constant bickering between Jacob and Edward, their immature behavior, their refusal to acknowledge the goodness in each other, the tug of war with Bella, got on my nerves. And the plot was just so much slower that a lot of the author's writing habits that I had been able to ignore when the plot was driving me forward were so glaring now that I almost couldn't stomach them. All the lips pulled back over the teeth (how do you even do that? I spent 5 minutes looking in the mirror trying to make a face that might resemble this description and only ended up looking like a turtle with his dentures out), the growling, the flexing of the fists, the glares and hisses.....ugh, I just got so tired of every facial and physical movement being described in minute detail. And in this book, Jacob just bugged me. I didn't find him refreshing and endearing anymore. Just annoying. Just over-the-top irritating and irrational. So ya. This was like the bridge book/movie that always comes in a multi part story--just getting you to the end without being much of a story in itself. Ya, the vampire fight at the end kept me riveted. But it almost wasn't worth the painful bickering and fighting through the rest of the book.
Chapter 4 - Breaking Dawn-- General opinion of this books seems to range from it being atrocious to fair. I only had one person tell me they loved this book. So after wading through Eclipse, I almost didn't want to start Breaking Dawn. But I did want some resolution to the story, so I set out. It took me a few chapters to get into it. But then I was quite surprised when the wedding took place as planned. Right there in the beginning of the book. I thought for sure something would go awry and we'd have to wait until the end of the book, that the wedding would be the climax. Then when Bella got pregnant, I was totally thrown for a loop again. I honestly hadn't thought that was possible (thank you for not ruining that for me, those of you who knew it was coming. I would have been so disappointed to know it was possible while reading the other books.) Then when Bella was dying during childbirth and Edward plunged the needle right into her heart to change her, I was once again completely shocked. I had expected either some outlandish alternative to the story that didn't' involve her becoming a vampire (like Edward somehow changing to human), or else a big romantic, detailed description about the whole process. I never expected it to be so abrupt, right then. I like surprises, and this book kept surprising me. I figured out the endings to the other three pretty fast. But this one was better at keeping things a secret until they happened. Another thing I did like about this book was that the pace was good throughout. It moved along well for me and didn't stall out like the 2nd and 3rd books both did. The writing seemed better--not as much drivel about people's body poses, the sounds through their teeth, and the texture and temperature of Edward's chest. I also really appreciated the fact that Bella stopped being clumsy and stupid when she became a vampire. Although some of her insecurities still remained, I was so glad she was able to jump without falling, that she was stronger than the others like she was supposed to be, and that she was not a below-average vampire as she had been a below-average human. It followed the cycle of a hero--having a weakness, going on a journey, entering hell, and then coming out renewed and better.
Now to the sci-fi parts. In Twilight the existence of very well-hidden vampires only stretches your imagination a bit. They look mostly like us. And the vast majority keep to themselves. Lots of unsolved murders can be explained by their presence. There really isn't anything so outlandish about the concept. Then when you discover in New Moon that there are werewolves, you pretty much have to throw all sense of reality out the window. You can't keep pretending that you're reading fiction. It's sci-fi now. So in Breaking Dawn when things got super sci-fi (the vampire hybrid baby, all the powers of the vampires, etc.) it didn't bother me. I had long since abandoned my need for this book to be anything close to realistic. I had given it over to pure science fiction and was fine with that. Really the only thing I can say that I absolutely HATED about Breaking Dawn was the name Renesmee. RENESMEE? Are you kidding me? Was the author serious about that name??? I thought for sure she was kidding. In fact, I was sure the child was going to be a boy, because when Bella announced the name she would use if the child should be a girl, I fully expected all the other characters to groan, or laugh out loud, or mock her. But they didn't. Then when it WAS a girl, I thought for sure someone would pull Bella aside and say, "Listen, Sweetie. I know you're fresh out of high school and that making combo names out of the parents names seems really avant garde to you, but it's not a cool way to name your child. Especially when one of the names is Renee and the other is Esmee. Try again, Dear." But they didn't. NO ONE said anything about it being the single most horrible name in any book EVER. Am I alone on this one? Did anyone else find themselves unable to move past the hideousness of that name? I couldn't. I just couldn't. Even the nickname from the Loch Ness Monster was a relief after Renesmee Carlie. Blech.
Epilogue - I have to admit, despite wanting to hate these books, that I liked them (well, most of them). There were parts I didn't like--places where you had to suspend your disbelief a little too much. Things about the characters that got on my nerves. Writing habits of the author that bugged me. Holes in the plot that I just couldn't ignore and that were never explained. But overall, I liked the books. I loved the first, like you tend to love the first of any series--the set up of the characters, the setting, the situation, and any magical characters or elements. The 2nd and 3rd books were OK verging on not OK. Mostly just a bridge to the end. And then the end had the satisfaction of tying things up nicely without just giving up and making this perfect happy ending. The fight seemed real, they had to work to gain the resolution they wanted. And Bella actually being the one to save the day instead of the one to need rescuing appeased the feminist in me. Don't get me wrong: I'm not going to start wearing around a t-shirt saying "My heart belongs to my husband, but my neck belongs to Edward." And I'm not going to be standing in line at midnight waiting for the next book, if it ever does get finished. But I'll read it. I'm amazed that Stephanie Meyer did such a good job for her first writing adventure, and the characters in the book have really grown on me. In fact, I think I might be missing them just a little bit today. Having slight Cullen withdrawals. Shhhh....don't tell.
Well, there you have it. Feel free to get your own thoughts off your chest.
The End
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