The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2
By Michael O'Sullivan
By Michael O'Sullivan
Friday, Nov. 16, 2012
At the far end of the spectrum of potential audience
for the “Twilight” franchise is the “Twi-Hard” contingent, those fanatic
loyalists to the book-turned-movie series who will camp out for a front-row
seat, no matter what the reviews say. Their only regret about “The Twilight Saga:
Breaking Dawn,” the two-part film whose final installment opens tonight,
bringing the five-chapter saga to an end, is that the whole magical experience
couldn’t last forever.
Alas, all good things must come to an end. And some
bad ones, too.
For those with no vested interest in this protracted
and supernatural soap opera, but who do care about cinema, “The Twilight Saga:
Breaking Dawn -- Part 2” will be, unsurprisingly, a silly and somewhat cheesily
made waste of time.
But this review isn’t written for either of those two
extremes. Rather, it’s for the theoretical viewer in the middle, the one who
cares as much about good storytelling as about whether Bella the human ends up
with Edward the vampire or Jacob the werewolf. Whether such a mythological
filmgoer even exists -- and is not more fanciful than the pasty-faced
bloodsuckers and buff fur balls who populate the tale -- is a question for
another day.
As “Breaking Dawn -- Part 2” opens, our once-mortal
heroine, Bella (Kristen Stewart), has just given birth to a half-human,
half-vampire baby, Renesmee, with her new, undead husband, Edward (Robert
Pattinson). To save her life, which had been threatened by carrying such a
monstrous, if undeniably photogenic spawn, Bella has been turned into a
vampire, through an injection of venom by her husband.
Almost the entire first third of the movie is devoted
to Bella’s adjustment to her new life and unfamiliar powers: her sudden thirst
for blood; her superhuman speed and strength; her seemingly insatiable (if
PG-13) sex drive; and the tricks she must learn in order to pass as human.
Endless minutes are devoted to colored contact lenses (to mask her red eyes),
an arm-wrestling contest with her vampire brother-in-law (Kellan Lutz), and
scenes of Edward and Bella running through the picturesque Pacific Northwest
woods on her first hunt, which culminates in an al fresco picnic dinner of
venison tartare.
Once again, the special effects are low grade, relying
heavily on old-fashioned camera blur and unconvincing wire work to convey a
sense of quickness and acrobatic agility, as Bella bounds from rock to tree to
mountaintop. It’s
“Crouching Tiger, Hidden Vampire,” without the verve.
Eventually, the real story kicks in after word reaches
the Volturi -- the vampire world’s governing elite -- that Renesmee may be
what’s known as an “immortal child,” a vampire baby who grows up with the
mental maturity, and imperfect self-control, of an infant. Immortal children
are illegal, since they cannot be trained to rein in their appetites, which
threatens to expose the carefully hidden vampire subculture to the rest of the
world. As Aro, the leader of the Volturi, Michael Sheen is a rare delight,
smiling malevolently -- and at one point issuing an insane cackle that’s worth
the price of admission -- as he attempts to determine whether Edward and his
family must be punished and Renesmee destroyed.
It ain’t much, but it passes for drama -- if by
“drama” you mean a climactic showdown in a field of snow between the powerful,
berobed Volturi on the one side, and a ragtag band of the “good” vampires, now
in league with Jacob and his pack of giant CGI werewolves, on the other. I’ll
tell you one thing: You have never seen so much unrealistic decapitation in
your life. After about the 20th head-popping, which flips off like the top of a
soda bottle, it’s just ridiculous.
Not so funny? The relationship between the werewolf
Jacob (Taylor Lautner) and Renesmee, played by the adorable poppet Mackenzie
Foy. As in the books, Jacob, Bella’s former suitor, has “imprinted” on the
little girl, a bit of lupine gobbledygook meaning that they are destined to
become lovers when she’s fully grown.
I know, I know: It’s fantasy. It’s also more than a
bit creepy, smacking of the child bride. Fortunately, Lautner brings a welcome
sense of detachment from the film’s absurdities. “Breaking Dawn,” which only
every now and again seems to have figured out that it’s okay to laugh at
itself, could use a little more of the actor’s wry, laid-back energy and a
little less pomposity.
As for Stewart and Pattinson, once again he looks
perpetually stoned, and she as if she has just detected a bad smell -- coming
off of her own underarms. Neither one has much range, or makes much of an
impression, other than vague malaise.
Then again, neither one has to. They are both so
indelibly associated with the roles of Bella and Edward at this point that it
will take each of them at least another couple of films before they fully shake
the connection with “Twilight.”
As for you, dear reader, the symptoms of our long
national nightmare should begin to fade as you’re heading out of the theater,
dissipating by the time you clear the concession stand.
Contains
sensuality and violence.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/gog/movies/the-twilight-saga-breaking-dawn-part-2,1169554/critic-review.html?wpisrc=nl_movies
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