I liked things that sucked when I was a teenager, too.
I liked the two Coreys – Feldman and Haim, respectively.
I liked ‘My Two Dads’ – a show that expounded the virtue of not knowing who your baby’s daddy was.
And I liked ‘Jaws 4: The Revenge’ – a movie that purported a Great White shark that followed a family from Maine to the Bahamas.
Twilight is like that shark.
It makes absolutely no sense.
I understand the movies and books are two different entities – meaning the movies are actually better than the books.
When you take a look at the books you realize that they’re a middling story with a “craptastic” writing pyramid.
These are books that rebel against the rule. Good authors show you instead of tell you. The ‘Twilight’ saga is exactly the opposite. The best I can come up with is purple prose.
Everything in ‘Twilight’ is about telling you something. Bella is clumsy. Edward loves Bella more than everything. Jacob thinks Edward is a twink.
When you juxtapose that against a series of books that is well written – ‘Harry Potter,’ for example -- there are glaring problems.
In ‘Harry Potter,’ the reader is never told that Hermoine and Ron would die for Harry. They’re shown it through actions, deeds and solid dialogue.
In ‘Twilight,’ though, it’s all about the telling. Edward and Bella are soul mates – they drill that into your head time and again. Bella is sad because she knows Edward is the one for her -- but Jacob is a great guy. Yeah, we get it, Stephanie Meyer writes it in every chapter.
Another problem with the ‘Twilight’ saga is that it gives teenage girls – the target audience -- the wrong idea about boys. Men that love you don’t tell you what to think, they don’t make decisions for you and they most certainly don’t watch you sleep without your knowledge. That’s called a stalker/control freak.
In the 1990s, the WB introduced a series called ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer.’ It was a wonderfully underappreciated show that had a strong heroine – which Bella is not – and a leading man/vampire named Angel that had a lot of Edward’s qualities. In the Buffy universe, vampires don’t have souls, except Angel was cursed with one. David Boreanaz did the dark and brooding thing better than Robert Pattinson does – yet they had the same hair do – go figure. Unlike Buffy, though, Bella constantly needs to be saved. Buffy didn’t have that problem, she did the saving. That, of course, if why she was a strong heroine and Bella is a weak and sniveling wonder.
In the ‘Twilight’ saga, Bella constantly needs to be rescued. She’s weak. She begs Edward to stay with her. She complains about not being a vampire and the thought that she may look older than him – can we say superficial – and she patterns her entire life on what she thinks Edward needs. In the second book, Bella actually mopes for six months because the guy she was dating for a month broke up with her and then attempts to put herself in danger to see a “vision” of her lost love. What a great message to give teenage girls – you need a man for validation.
Why, exactly, would two men be vying for a girl that has no personality of her own?
The only things that are ever established about Bella is that she is clumsy and loves Edward – apparently on sight. We know nothing else about the character.
Now, I read the first three books and found them mildly entertaining but harmless. When I read the fourth book, ‘Breaking Dawn,’ things changed.
First of all, the entire book is an anti-abortion diatribe. Forget your politics, but Bella refusing to try anything to stop the fetus inside of her from killing her is a little odd.
The actual birth, though, is probably the most exciting thing to happen in the entire book. Kenneth Johnson, the man responsible for such great television as ‘The Incredible Hulk’ and ‘Alien Nation,’ should sue. Renesme – the baby from hell – is pretty much the clone of Elizabeth from the original ‘V’ saga. A half human hybrid that grows at a spectacular rate, has special abilities and is savior to the world. Huh, where have I seen that before?
I mean, let’s forget that the ending of ‘Breaking Dawn’ is a great big snooze fest., but when you take into account that you had some sort of threesome set up as an epic triangle and yet no one loses in the end – what the heck? Unlike ‘Buffy’ and ‘Harry Potter,’ the fact that none of the characters in ‘Twilight’ ever actually lose – or have to give up anything – it’s ludicrous.
‘Twilight’ makes it seem that there’s a larger than life man out there to make everything perfect for you.
Exactly what world is that realistic in?
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