The
century-old-vampire hero and still-human heroine of this film franchise are
accused of being badly enacted. Robert Pattinson’s Edward and Kristen Stewart’s
Bella are said to have very tiny spectrums of body language. Actually, what
they mostly have are micro expressions. They also manage the occasional
trembling of voice and shouting, leaking of tears and shrieking. But their
uniqueness as a couple, meant particularly for fans of the source novels, lies
in boring subtleties of thoughts expressed. These enactments are spot on even
during altered and added dialogue, but the personalities involved and magic
possible [vampiric; superhuman] are not re-established as cinematically unique
by each sequel. Non-fans do need a reminder that the hero can read all minds
and the heroine can defy all vampiric mental powers i.e. he can’t sense her
unexpressed, purely inner thought processes. Consistently demonstrating each
special ability would’ve made impossible his losing a fight against brawnier
vampire Felix in 2nd film New
Moon and struggling through his fight against two other vampires in 3rd
film Eclipse. Come to think of
it, even the only fight during 1st film Twilight would have ended before it could begin, thus
replicating what its novel implied/s.
But this fictional world has also encouraged a
truly real addiction. Fashion. What we prefer to wear, live in and drive must
be fashionable. We must strive to acquire these possessions and then use
them as exuberantly as possible. How ironic that all the extraordinary sensory
abilities and intellectual caliber of vampires haven’t led them to infer ways
of saving any ecologies. The Twilight Saga, hence, is flawed escapism.
The
Twilight Saga could’ve been great cinema if the characters and plot were added
to, remixed and subtracted from until they became unrecognizable as
adaptations. The cast could then be possessing habits, smothering impulses,
effecting resolutions and experiencing circumstances completely unlike those in
the adapted series. They could be old beverages as new mocktails, served in mosaic
pitchers. The overall stories could also be re-titled. Didn’t happen, so we
have now got 4th film Breaking
Dawn Part I on our DVD trays.
Well,
it is as much a cinematically musical patchwork as each previous installment. I
mean some songs selected and cues composed for this movie support their
respective sequences very well. The resolve to alternate between
lyric-containers and wordless performances has been evident since this film
franchise started, seemingly ensured by their novelist taking inspiration from
rock and other music. After all, their novelist’s favourite band Muse
contributed a song each to the 3 preceding movies. It’s a different matter that
only the first song made its sequence unique: the coolness of vampire baseball
can be conveyed by just such a collaboration of instrumentals and vocals. As
for Breaking Dawn Part I, this
first part of the finale starts with ‘song’ Love
Death Birth, a fresh orchestral start by score composer Carter Burwell.
Makes a little use of his two signature tunes for franchise-initiator Twilight, substantiating finale
director Bill Condon’s saying “there are stylistic nods to that film”, yet its
three stretches enhance their respective sequences in different ways: A grabs
attention; B descends into silliness; C –the longest– sweeps through
majestically. The middle stretch, B, does redeem itself as cue Cold Feet by concluding scarily. This
scariness transcends the apparent homage to classic horror film Bride Of Frankenstein, thus
additionally seeming a jibe at that old-style Hollywood movie: some typical
1935 American audience getting shocked by a motionless screamer is an outdated
phenomenon for us today.
This
scariness is then taken up by cue What
You See In The Mirror. But more negatively energizing is Breaking Dawn
Part 1’s other signature tune, available as cues Pregnant and Don’t Choose
That, facilitating our masochist-sadist enjoyment of the relevant
sequences: many fan girls enjoy being scared by vampire hero Edward “ghosting”
around and are entertained by supernaturally pregnant, still-human heroine
Bella quietly bearing pain. More memorably scary is Aqualung and Lucy
Schwartz’s Cold. Its lyrics,
symbolizing one plot strand, are sung gloomily with only a gloomily played
piano for company…during a horror montage of internet information about
“immortal children” and vampire-human hybrids, as Bella sleeps uncomfortably,
and then when Bella discovers before a bath exactly how much she has wasted
away. The web-stored illustrations discovered by Edward also acknowledge Twilight’s sequence of Bella
searching for facts about vampires, despite zero overlap. That earlier sequence
had left me with one image [drops of blood suspended above goblets], which got
modified in my memory from containers bound by rounded edges to precisely
triangular representations of inverted cones. Hearing the cue set to that
sequence again might spoil the beans for me, if like any signature tune present
in the latest-released-sequel.
Another
cue –A Nova Vida– begins when Edward
drives Bella away from the Cullen house near Forks, after their wedding. Having
read the novels, I was expecting a heartbroken wolf howl any moment. But a
solo, wordless vocal begins (instead) after the midpoint. This is then
intersected by a wolf cry, thus thrilling me. Guillermo Navarro’s
cinematography of the howl-containing shot –which concludes this first Forks
act– boringly jumped out at me: camera beneath the whizzing gallery reflection
of trees on Bella’s window. The wordless singing and instrumentals continue, smoothly
supporting the geographically emotional transition from Forks to Rio.
Unfortunately, this romanticizes Rio as a tourist spot. Why the hell do we need
to be shown Rio’s Jesus Christ statue? Because he, like good vampires, is stone
offering everyone an embrace?
Yet
it is worth noting that Breaking Dawn
Part I has this franchise’s only inter-credits sequence, which The
Belle Brigade’s I Didn’t Mean It
assists as cool rock. Labeled so to argue for the view that some Volturi human
mistakenly spelt a name wrong, it builds up during the first credit round and
continues throughout two sets which may really be temporarily renovated
locations. These interior scenes are huge and empty, emphasizing contrast
between the majestically regal Volturi leaders and noisy rockers. The leaders
are typically maintaining their authority even in the token sense by sitting
while all other Volturi vampires stand, though neither get tired of any posture
or activity. Then the foremost leader contends that “Carlisle” is Kaar-lyl misspelled,
whereas I used to read it out Kaar-li-sal. Aforementioned human, the Volturi’s
receptionist, is promptly dragged out of the wider interior to be killed for
noting down the fax wrong. Is this in good self-referential taste or a joke
trapped in morbidity to exemplify how evil most Volturi vampires are? The waste
of architectural spaciousness suggests otherwise.
Set
design for The Twilight Saga has most uniquely been showcased during the
starting shot of Breaking Dawn Part I:
dried cowpats pinning down a tarpaulin onto a sloping roof. Using cattle dung
for this rather than sustaining fires might have occurred to a native North
American without assistance from white modernists. Faced with the prospect of
leaky modern European roofs, he or (less possibly) she might have devised the
rainfall-defying combo that is a roof-covering tarp held steady by crap-discs.
The cozy feeling conveyed by these and other miscellaneous details constituting
the aforementioned sloping roof is obvious because we see them after an equally
cozy title presentation, the Sun piercing through red clouds while “breaking
dawn –part 1–“ appears and embarrassingly labeled cue The Kingdom Where Nobody Dies begins blissfully. This cue is, not
to mention, stretch A of more intelligently labeled ‘song’ Love Death Birth.
Another
set dressing added to The Twilight Saga, i.e. absent from the novels, is the
panel of “graduation caps” in Edward’s current foster home. His only relatives
now are his foster family, most having graduated many times because they can
then seem teenage humans. Hence they carry their collection of graduation caps
to wherever they’re settling down. Unfortunately, this is explained only once.
Could’ve been impressed on our minds by a completely reworked plot, via witty
cinematic events present in the screenplays but not novels. Instead, fans are
reminded of it as a tasteful inside joke through statements uttered by Bella’s
biological parents. Roger Ebert is not a fan and hasn’t even read the novels,
so he didn’t mention it as funny. It does happen to be another substantiation
of Breaking Dawn Part I as a
“companion piece” to Twilight,
though.
Taylor
Lautner’s Jacob has been emoted best until now in this film being reviewed.
Early on, he quietly enunciates disgust in two slightly different ways: “That’s
a sick joke” comes out from an emotionally hardened face; and “You’re joking”
begins his aggressive plea. His usual varieties of well-meaning harshness
follow. But he also manages to shake out (tearless) sobs.
I,
having read the novels, also appreciate instances of enunciation showcased by
other actors and actresses in this film. Kristen Stewart’s Bella sheepishly
pushes out the words “…sacrifice and love”, then manages one sheepish pose
while declaiming “I’ll be the one in white”. Embarrasses me as much as herself.
Julia Jones’s Leah goofily prolonging all (invariably nasal) utterances, just
like reel brother Booboo Stewart’s Seth, is a nice acting symmetry courtesy not
being hyped during the movie. Robert Pattinson’s Edward making his voice shiver
at a fiercely low amplitude as he exclaims “That’s what you’re worried about?
That I didn’t enjoy myself?” Stands out from among all his, mostly repetitive,
expressions of tortured heroism.
The
Twilight Saga is failed cinema stories because of literal concepts at most
times and boring symbolism at many other times. New Moon’s title presentation showcases restrained eeriness
in its synchronized visual and music, but the symbolic full moon getting wiped
out within this static shot is an unimaginatively literal conceptualization of
its source title. Eclipse
avoids this fate in another context: instead of spelling apart Quileute and
Cullen land as two odourscapes, which could be presented by Quileute wolves
inhaling then coughing out pink air, a bad vamp fleeing from both groups is
shown repeatedly jumping across the deep and wide ravine indicating their
border. So they continue running after her on their respective cliffways, but
her strategy enables eventual escape.
On
the one hand, Breaking Dawn Part I
imposes its message that Bella as a vampire just must have a big bust
and her lips will obviously part sexily as vampirification concludes.
On
the other hand, Breaking Dawn Part I
manages to intertwine literalism with a dichotomous symbol: Edward plays chess
with blood red pieces against his wife Bella’s marble white pieces, and they
may be switching in later matches. He can enjoy possessing so much of his
favourite substance’s representation while she can gleefully salivate at proprietorship
over so much of her favourite cold hard body’s representation. Worth noting as
an aside that a Cold Feet-cued shot
[wind stirred by Edward’s entry ruffling Bella’s hair] is staying lodged in my
memory as indicative of Edward’s supernaturally low body temperature. Bella
also gets the opportunity to flaunt blood red chess pieces in matches against
his marble white representatives, and vice versa. All this is the first witty
adaptation of nearly abstract cover art in my experience. For this film’s novel
has a blood red pawn morphing into a marble white queen on its cover.
The
caesarian delivery scene climaxing this film could have been censored by an
even ghastlier interruption: horses flailing mid-air while their riders fumble
to catch huge egg Humpty Dumpty, who consequently fractures mid-fall and spews
blood over them. This could be positioned as a filmic image occurring to Jacob.
After all, he did narrate in the final novel “All the king’s horses and all the
king’s men…We couldn’t put Bella back together again.” All that need be shown
then would be horrified faces and frantically pumping hands, vampire-human baby
Renesmee being carried away in the background. I mean to say Breaking Dawn Part I suggests
birthing details too much and whatever it does depict is too mundane. Edward
trying to resuscitate Bella packs a better punch: as his viscous venom is
squeezed from a syringe into her torso, that fluid stacks up as ‘floors’ that
are immediately descending one after the other through this injector; the gory
sounds indicating whenever she is, subsequently, bitten by him are almost as
good.
Merely
eerie, on the other hand, is the interrupted and then concluded shot of a
rubbish bin filled with empty blood sachets. This bin’s lid jerks open during
the first stretch to reveal nothing but these inwardly bloody packets, and then
shuts slowly during the second stretch. Thus maximal eeriness is milked out, if
I may be allowed to muddle contexts.
Rewinding till moments before Bella
is wedded to Edward, two facets are worth noting. Sleeping At Last’s purely
instrumental Turning Page hint at
lyrics that shall be sung while the couple make love for the first time, and
Billy Burke’s Charlie holding back tears on being about to reach the aisle
seems a struggle to maintain dignity. The instrumentals before he gets weepy
support some consumerist romanticism: beautifully littered grassiness evoking
paradise in its barbless and shardless glory; followed by our closest glance
at the intricately skimpy back of Bella’s wedding dress. Anyways, Charlie’s
tremulous face is eminently likeable because his daughter is about to be
married in front of a huge crowd. And after he has handed her over to Edward at
their altar, the editing cut as soon as he begins removing his hand from
Bella’s lower arm emphasizes the potent acting.
Four songs are played during Edward
and Bella’s honeymoon. The above nuptials paragraph alludes to the third
–Sleeping At Last’s Turning Page,
which conveys this couple’s mutual bliss (and is continued when the wife
remembers their caresses). The second song serves as a good jumping point for
it by failing to stand out. The first
and fourth are humorous, but only the latter accompanies sensible turmoil:
Noisettes’s Sister Rosetta (2011 Version)
maintains pacing of a sequence with the message that even so
unconventional heroine Bella should resolve to shave her legs; whereas The
Features’s From Now On is punctuated
by the husband rebuffing under-confident seduction. This entire honeymoon,
noteworthily, happens on a spectacular island off the Brazilian coast and
privately owned by the wife’s mother-in-law. Many non-fans will probably think
this location-devising authorial tactic is selling the notion of wealthy
vampirism channelized into drinking only animal blood.
Shape-shifters in wolf form,
similarly, can consume raw meat (since they manage to kill most big land
animals with one snap of the jaw). So shape-shifters and good vampires should
be depicted in fifth aka last film adaptation Breaking Dawn Part II as dealing with the problem that is
decreasing wild animal populations. As many satisfactorily large-bodied blood
sources are becoming extinct and endangered, Cullens might have to break their
treaty with shape-shifting aka superhuman Quileutes (who can live without
eating sparse wild animals). Seems an amoral thing to do for these supernatural
non-humans, until natural non-humans fill the Earth once more. After all, human
populations are constantly increasing. Could still mean a lethal battle with superhuman
Quileutes “phased” into wolves.