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Twilight: Moping at the New Moon

Too much angst, not enough saga in wholesome vampire sequel

Bella: I’m coming.
Edward: I don’t want you to.

—The Twilight Saga: New Moon

Worry not for the purity of your tween girls, global mothers. Where Catherine Hardwicke’s lively, irreverent take on the first book in the Twilight series at least made room for a few suggestive winks, the sequel is stuck right in the abstinence mud with author Stephenie Meyer. Meyer may be, as Oprah admiringly called her recently, a “black-belt reader,” but as a writer, she’s strictly Dear Diary, and screenwriter Melissa Rosenberg, who wrote The Twilight Saga: New Moon, is nothing if not respectful of her vapid prose. The movie, directed by Chris Weitz, comes off very much like Clint Eastwood’s The Bridges of Madison County — professional filmmaking applied to subliterary euphemistic trash, in this case couched in the jejune crush-fantasies of a Mormon mom stranded at home with three little boys.

Personally, I don’t get the lure of vampire chic, but attention must be paid, if only because millions of girls on the cusp of adolescence and beyond — not to mention, after lights out, their mothers — groove to Meyer’s chaste, oddly bloodless and nearly plotless saga of a troubled high school outsider who finds love and protection with a family of expensively attired bloodsuckers in red-gold contact lenses.

If nothing else, the new movie honors the anodyne spirit of its source — give or take a few CGI face-offs between werewolves and vampires. New moon or not, Bella (Kristen Stewart) is still yearning on, and on and on and on, for the neck bite that will be her ticket to eternal supernatural bliss with Edward (Robert Pattinson), he of the moussed hair, fairy-dusted skin and no personality to speak of.

All media reports to the contrary, Edward has not left the building. After a very long good-bye, repeated at 15-minute intervals with mournful stares and fluttery minikisses, he mysteriously retreats briefly to vampire country, then returns in ghostly form to protect Bella from ... nothing very much, unless you count the more than three months, unfolding in what feels like real time, that she spends pining away in bed. Some day, Kristen Stewart, who cut a striking presence earlier this year in Greg Mottola’s Adventureland, will do great things with her instinctive intensity, but as Bella, she stares and mutters, mutters and stares until, discovering risky behavior à la Church of Latter-Day Saints, she hitches a 100-yard motorbike ride with a complete stranger, then settles for bike assembly with good old reliable schoolmate Jacob (Taylor Lautner), who is not all he seems.

A moment of carnal potential rears its head briefly when Lautner, pumped unto incredible hulk, strips off his shirt, eliciting girlish screams from the audience that even the subsequent display of Pattinson’s puny, white torso can’t measure up to. Weitz, who seems to have dozed through the making of New Moon thus far, wakes up long enough to deliver a short display of bare-fanged competitive masculinity, followed by a sudden trip to something resembling Italy, with lots of red robes (thank you, Dan Brown) and over-the-top Catholicity. There, in a movie almost totally devoid of humor, let alone real passion, waits Michael Sheen, king of the evil Volturi, decked out in a long, black wig and a curling lip. Alone of all the earnest players in this turgidly euphemistic melodrama, Sheen seems to grasp that the only way you can keep a straight face through this choked-up virginity is to carry it way into camp.

THE TWILIGHT SAGA: NEW MOON | Directed by CHRIS WEITZ | Written by MELISSA ROSENBERG, based on the novel New Moon by STEPHENIE MEYER | Produced by WYCK GODFREY and KAREN ROSENFELT | Summitt Entertainment | Citywide

 
  • JJ Fowler 12/03/2009 12:46:00 AM

    Ms. Taylor, your account of Twilight New Moon is hilarious and pointed. It almost makes me want to go see it! It's too bad the film series didn't take notes from Joss Whedon's Buffy the Vampire Slayer, playing the teen angst/monster love to the hilt. Twilight's self-seriousness ignores the comedic and horrific potential of successful vampire film making: (e.g. Let the Right One In, Lost Boys)

  • Anne Powell 11/25/2009 5:40:00 AM

    Thank you for the first good and honest review of this vapid yearn-fest of tween longing.. and to paraphrase you... longing on and on and on... It was hard not to laugh out loud at this nonsense- thanks for a voice of reason in the melodrama without the drama!

  • Sarah 11/25/2009 2:03:00 AM

    Rude, snarky & tacky. The last is an unforgivable offense. A poor review of a movie that I found to be cool, funny and not a little tongue in cheek. I mean, come on, sparkly vampires? Could your writer be taking herself a little too seriously? Lighten up & have a little fun. LA Weekly (and their reviewers, apparently) need to get a clue.

  • Linda 11/25/2009 12:49:00 AM

    I find the film shady grade of grey but that does not excuse promoting 'carnality" in movies. Jumping beds is as stupid as it is dangerous and women should value themselves for more than just being handy sexual device. It also needs to be pointed out that large part of the allure is based in very traditional roles: the males always rescue the female whom they love to death but chastely. Obviously, many women would prefer such treatment to demands for sex, cleaning service, paycheck, daycare and male care. It's overlong, convulted and looking for loopholes to sustain the vampire-human connection which is the only plot offered. I was bored. But a critic need to understand more than just sex-or lack of it.

  • Mel 11/21/2009 8:16:00 AM

    They don't write better than Ella. That's all.

 

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