On Thursday night, I went to the 10 PM showing of Breaking Dawn Part 2. It was the first time I ever went to a first showing. I loved it! I thought it stayed true to the book for the most part. I didn’t care
for the song in the first scene. There was a beautiful score at the end of BD1 and BD2 continued with a song with vocals. And not just any song. It has to be a male singer singing his highest tenor. I found it very distracting for the scene I've waited months to see. I would have preferred score. Save the tenor for when they leave the house to go hunting.
Another thing I really didn’t care for was the animated
face on Renesmee. I know critics have
criticized George Lucas for focusing too much on special effects and not enough
on the acting, but I think sometimes it’s called for to be a
perfectionist on CGI; especially in this
day and age. You want your audience to
be focused on the story, not getting distracted by the visual effects that
are in sad need of improvement. Maybe they
should have had baby Renesmee be totally CGI? When I visualized her in my mind while reading the novel, I thought of her looking like a regular baby. They should have used the same baby they used for Bella and kept the facial expressions at a minimum.I’m not one for "spoiling" movies for others, so I won't go into much detail here. The twist . . . to steal a line from Flynn Rider, “I did not see that coming!” It's like they took a page from M. Night Shyamalan! Everyone who made this film was probably laughing at us! I wouldn’t be surprised if they filmed audience reaction in selected theaters. I would have actually liked to have seen my reaction, like the pictures they take on amusement park rides! Anyway, I thought it was ingenious! This is storytelling at it’s best!
Alice.
Alice can be
so pixie-like and sweet, but can be quite the she-cat when loved ones are
threatened! She’s one of my favorites
out of the female Cullens. Although, there has
been one thing that has bothered me about Alice. I’ve done some reading about physic ability,
from Allison DuBois to John Edwards to Sylvia Browne. I’ve found many common characteristics
between them and other people who share their ability. It seems
most people, including those in TV and movies seem to share the misconception
that psychics are all-knowing. The irony
of it is psychics are not psychic about themselves and are rarely psychic about their own
family and friends. I see this happen so many times on TV shows and realize that the writer's are going on misconceptions rather than bothering to research it. Granted, I will give
Alice’s character a break because her ability to foresee the future was
magnified when she became a vampire, along with her other senses. And I have to remember that she never claimed to be psychic. That is the assumption we make when we learn she can see the future.
Veronica