Review: The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1

The Twilight Saga Breaking Dawn Image About 4 of the 117 minutes that make up The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 will capture your attention.  Those 4 minutes are nearly ruined, too, when someone opens their mouth; which ends up being a frequent, and indirectly funny, occurrence.

The story is quite simple in this installment: Vampire Edward (Robert Pattinson) and human Bella (Kristen Stewart) are finally getting hitched.  Everyone is happy about this.  Even the werewolf, Jacob (Taylor Lautner) seems to be cool with it, despite his eternal hard-on for Bella.  That is until he learns Bella wants Edward to try to impregnate her prior to changing her to a full-blown vamp (apparently that’s not good).  So Jacob then continues his pouting and the on-going supernatural cock fight for the average & boring looking girl rages on.

While on the honeymoon at a secluded island off the shores of Brazil, Edward reluctantly honors Bella’s wishes to try to give her a child.  He worries though (seems that’s all he does in these damn flicks) that the “fetus” may be something no one has ever seen or dealt with before, therefore, harming Bella.  Well, the virile vamp pulls it off which leads to Bella having dire complications; sparking a possible breach of the treaty between the Cullen clan and the Werewolves.

Sorry Twi-hards, this installment sets the franchise way back and now deserves the clichéd ribbing many people do when talking about this product.  This is easily the worst film in the now four picture franchise.  Improvements were being made with each sequel.  New Moon proved that this adapted story from Stephenie Meyer’s popular novels could in fact be cinematical.  And Eclipse’s totality as a feature length film changed a lot of hater’s minds including yours truly.  The direction that Breaking Dawn took, well, took all the life out of the series.  Sure the loyal will eat this crap up, but chances are they are force feeding themselves (i.e. willing their mind & heart to like it).

The screenplay is handled like a romantic-comedy without any rhyme or reason.  Serving shallow dialogue all around and having the characters mock themselves just isn’t working here.  And the choice of a soundtrack is way out of place, for the tone of what this should have been (dramatic) is confused as the director and performers.  Based on the material given here, Pattinson and Stewart are sadly unable to carry this movie as they are asked to do.  Taylor Lautner enters and tries to anchor this down, but the most intriguing character is also hampered with more terrible dialogue and piss-poor timing.  No one has evolved and that’s kind of the point of a progressing story.  And there is no help from the supporting cast as they are given nothing to do except act – which in this case translates to stand and look concerned – as a warm (and cold) body count (I’m Team Jasper by the way).

So that 4 minutes mentioned above happens in the last 15 minutes, involving a brief werewolf and vampire clash outside the Cullen house.  Right before that sequence, there’s a decent dramatic pitch with Bella going into labor.  As stated before though, just when they’re on the path to passable filmmaking, someone opens their mouth and the direction goes to hell.  The only thing that could have improved this piece is having Beavis and Butt-Head sitting on a couch providing sarcastic commentary (you’re welcome Mike Judge).

One thing that is noteworthy is this particular flick tackles and depicts some mature situations.  There’s an awful amount of time dedicated toward the Edward & Bella honeymoon – a.k.a. vamp baby-making.  Let’s just say they are suggestive scenes that mainly see Kristen Stewart prancing around in quasi-sexy lingerie and tastefully having sex with Mopey the vampire.  So perhaps a chat with your teenage daughter may be warranted after this.  That is, if this installment doesn’t completely turn them off.

If one can overlook the bad acting and lazy story, what this product really needed was a solid edit.  I’m all for a movie taking its time but lingering on superficial scenes that fail to dial up any emotion and/or have a purpose is literally laughable.  By doing so, this direction plays – and projects – something resembling the spoof nature of Vampire Sucks rather than what one saw in the previous two Twilight sequels.

Overall, The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 is dead on arrival.  In sequel terms, this represents a B-movie horror flick that continues to spawn more installments that debut on the SyFy channel.  And that’s never a good thing, kids.  Everyone has gone backwards here, losing the momentum that Eclipse fought hard to attain.

And if you’re still into this – which is to say you enjoy subpar filmmaking and stories – be sure to stay after the credits for a teaser.

RATING:  1 out of 5 

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  • Xhamira D.

    I haven’t seen it yet, so I can’t say much, but this seems like a pretty honest review. I love the books and I think the real problem was that they split the book. To be honest, they seem like they just want to make more money or were just copying Harry Potter. Breaking Dawn, however, did not need to be 2 movies. So yes, I can imagine it was boring and there was a lot of unnecessary scenes and dialogue. Regardless, I will still see it, and I will probably enjoy it after watching a few times when it gets released on DVD/Bluray, because that’s how it always happens…Put simply, the books are always better and the movies need to grow on me.
    By the way, if you don’t know the book and that’s what you got out of the movie up there in your summarized story line…I’m a little concerned now.

    • Joe Belcastro

      I was never a Twilight-hater Xhamira.  The only thing I got a kick out of is when 45 year-old women would go crazy when a 16 year-old would take off his shirt.  So yes, this was an honest review.  Bottom line, it looks like they had a terrible director this time around

    • Anonymous

      I have read the book and that has been torture enough for me… I can’t sit through the movie… The first part of the novel makes no sense, talking from a biological stand-point… Either they have to say, ‘look, this makes no sense just go with it’ or give it some scientific grounding like they do in hard science fiction, Stephenie Meyer has tried to do both and the end product is not good.

      Spoiler (for part 2):
      and they keep building up for this all out war between the volturri and the Cullens and their allies… and finally it just blows over and nothing really happens which is really anti climatic…

  • Ola

    OK ,now you fanboy go and offend some batman lovers,or come back to your porno-crap movies,there are pefect for you.

  • De_Roche22

    I’m guessing that this thing is really gonna drag along when I see it on Friday…Fantastic,  It’s gonna be the longest two hours of my life…

    • Joe Belcastro

      Fill your flask with red-bull my friend!

  • Twistedpixelmail

    or alcohol

  • http://www.online-pokerhu.com Online Póker

    Highly disappointing that the production didn’t do better. Perhaps the script was so boring even the director fell asleep during shoots or hired a stand in while he got a few extra afternoons out on the links. I sincerely hope this doesn’t put top execs off making complex stories multiple movies. As an audience member, it isn’t the fact that I’ll have to wait for the next installment to finish the story that’s putting me off from catching the latest movie, but lousy execution! Thank’s Ben for taking the time to I.d. what’s dead from the undead in this…

    • Joe Belcastro

      You’re welcome Online Poker….but I’m not Ben ;).

  • person

    the book was horrible so i expected this. im not gonna bother wasting my money for this