Film Review by Kam Williams
Headline: Fantasy Sequel Finds Bella Torn between Vampire and Werewolf
Despite the fact that all of the principal cast members have returned for the sequel, New Moon pales in comparison (pardon the expression) to the scintillating original which landed on this critic’s Annual Top Ten List a year ago. Since the new production retains the services of the same scriptwriter, the obvious explanation for the difference in quality is the replacement of Catherine Hardwicke with Chris Weitz as director.
After all, most of the movies on Mr. Weitz’s resume’ are comedies, including such hilarious hits as Down to Earth and American Pie. So, it makes sense that he would opt to infuse this flick with lots of lighthearted levity. But a big reason why Twilight 1 worked so well was that rather than break the tension with comic relief, Hardwicke wisely chose to let it to continue to build, thus ratcheting up the intensity in a manner that made for a bone-chilling experience.
By comparison, Twilight
Equally annoying is when the potentially shocking revelation that Jacob is a werewolf is immediately undercut by the punny quip “Guess the wolf’s out of the bag.” On another occasion, potentially-menacing werewolves are merely dismissed as a harmless “pack of mutts.”
All of the above notwithstanding, Twilight
Who am I to quibble with a patently-preposterous, escapist fantasy which never takes itself seriously, yet somehow still resonates perfectly with the overly-sentimental, puppy love inclinations of passionate, prepubescent females?
Good (2 stars)
Rated PG-13 for violence and some action.
Running time: 130 minutes
Studio: Summit Entertainment
fyi, the part when Bells said "he probably has that flu that's going around" she wasn't referring to swine flu at all, if you read the book you would have known that. so if you intend to diss the film, just make sure you get the facts right.
ReplyDeleteOh Brother. Yet another typical spineless New Moon review from a hopelessly non-romantic critic. It starts out with first dissing the fan base, which is mostly girls. You would never see a review of Harry Potter or even American Pie start with a curmudgeonly patronizing nod to an all boy fan base. Sigh.
ReplyDeleteAfter that rousingly insulting beginning, instead of giving the film a thorough review, we see quibbling about the films attempts to add some levity into what is essentially a heartbreaking story.
I thought the subtle jokes were fantastic punctuation marks lightening up the dark mood and made perfect sense. This irony of jokes and the serious is present in the books for sure - and I thoroughly think these smiles were needed and at all like Chris' work in directing American Pie. That was a cheap shot.