Breaking Dawn Movie Review
Tuesday, April 12th, 2011Breaking Dawn, the final book in the best-selling Twilight Saga, will take your breath away. Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight Saga, a publishing juggernaut, has built fan anticipation to a climactic ending for this fantastic vampire-romance series. Breaking Dawn was released on August 2, 2008. From its initial print run of 3.7 million copies, 1.3 million were sold in the first 24 hours of the book’s release. Fascination with Bella Swan and Edward Cullen spans the globe, with more than 30 countries snatching up translation rights for Twilight.
New Moon ends with vampire Edward proposing marriage to mortal Bella because he won’t change her into a vampire, her goal, until they’re married. Eclipse is the more violent book with an actual battlefield episode included; Breaking Dawn, however, begins with the two getting married soon after their high school graduation.
Draw in one way by her strong obsession for Edward Cullen and in another by her thoughtful relation to Jacob Black, Bella Swan has bear a confused year of attraction, defeat and conflict to achieve the definitive turning point. Now that Bella has completed her choice, a surprising chain of unparalleled events is on the verge of unfolding with potentially overwhelming and deep penalty.
Unlike a normal pregnancy, the child will be half vampire and half mortal since Edward has still yet to turn Bella. The pregnancy is not only happening faster, but it is physically abusive to Bella. The baby rejects all forms of food until they realize what it is that will quench the thirst: blood.
Veenker says that she gets thousands of emails and letters from fans interested in being part of the movies. “It scares me to think of what the low-lives out there could do to hurt such easy targets,” she adds. According to MSNBC.com Veenkner did what many want to be Twilight movie fans should do if they see an ad for an extras call. She researched the responsible party and learned that they have an “F” rating with the Better Business Bureau.
The saga finale opens with Bella’s and Edward’s wedding, honeymoon and surprise human/vampire hybrid honeymoon baby. The baby’s birth is easily one of the most gruesome scenes ever written with a young audience in mind and Bella gives her a truly awful name, Renesmee. The one redeeming factor of the novel is that a large portion is, for the first time, narrated by another character, in this case, Jacob. While it’s not done to perfection, Meyers is able to capture and present Jacob’s tortuous involvement with Bella and the other Cullens.
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