The Twilight Saga: New Moon (2009)
Posted on : 06-12-2009 | By : Maz | In : 3 'M' Films, Films, Reviews
Tags: Acting, Adaptation, Drama, Melodrama, Romance, Teen, Vampire
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Delayed review of director Chris Weitz’s The Twilight Saga: New Moon, the second instalment in the 4-part series of the teen vampire romance, based on the novels by Stephenie Meyer.
Director: Chris Weitz
Starring: Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Taylor Lautner, Michael Sheen
Running time:130 mins
In the last Twilight film, star cross’d lover Bella Swan made a request of her vampire boyfriend, teen dream Edward Cullen, to change her from her state of “fragile little human” to one of vampiric immortal. Edward declines, reluctant to end Bella’s life for her and transform her into a “monster”. It is this desire and denial between the two (coupled with Edward’s uncertainty about how wise it is to carry on the relationship, based on earnest concerns for Bella’s safety) that creates palpable tension at the beginning of New Moon, eventually reaching crisis point after a tiny papercut at her birthday party puts Bella’s life in danger. Edward consequently breaks up with her, leaves the town of Forks, apparently out of Bella’s life forever.

As one might be able to predict, given the level of eye-gazing and soul searching our lovers engaged in during the first film and the level of besotted infatuation between them, Bella does not take the break-up well. In fact, to say that is an understatement – she enters a downward spiral of what can only be described as depression and near mental breakdown. Socially alienated and tortured by horriffic nightmares, Bella is a lost soul. That is until she is reawoken by friend Jacob Black. By spending time with Jacob, Bella’s emotional healing begins – until a dark secret Jacob is harbouring threatens their friendship.
In New Moon, Chris Weitz has crafted a faithful adaptation of Stephenie Meyer’s novel of the same name but a film which sadly maintains the book’s langorous quality and lack of pace, slowing down and picking up in an awkward fashion, exemplified in the film’s anti-climactic third act in Italy (however, this is arguably the fault of the poorly structured source material). However, the film opens well, picking up soon after the events of Twilight and makes good use of flashback footage of the first film, using Bella’s silvery scar and other reference points to link thematically and narratively with Catherine Hardwicke’s initial outing. However, a detail in which Weitz has done the film a disservice is his decision to change the film’s colour palette; Twilight is shot in a cool, glassy blue, capturing the striking beauty and coldness of both the Cullen family and the film’s location of Washington state (played in reality by Portland, Oregon).

Weitz’s New Moon departs from the frosty colours of Twilight to warm, golden hues which give the pale vampire make-up and contact lenses a garish theatricality and falseness – see above picture of Robert Pattinson’s chalky complexion. New Moon also uses a different composer for its score, which again changes the tone of things – gone is the lilting and decorative piano theme of ‘Bella’s Lullaby’ and in place is a fairly nondescript score, a real shame as there could have been room for linking themes, creating a sense of a whole ’saga’ (as the film is so reticently marketed). We must acknowledge that Lord of the Rings this isn’t, and we will get no such musical continuity here. The featured songs in the film however are excellent, with great tunes from Death Cab For Cutie (who provide the film’s promo single ‘Meet Me on the Equinox’), Bon Iver, Thom Yorke and Muse.
Another area where the film succeeds is in its casting and main players. Kristen Stewart as Bella is very good, anchoring the story convincingly and sensitively. As Edward, Robert Pattinson doesn’t make much of an appearance in the film, but when onscreen is credibly haunting and of course, achingly gorgeous. But Pattinson is not to be outdone in the looks department by Taylor Lautner who is really the film’s show stealer.
At all times believable, endearing and generating many scenes of palpable sexual and emotional tension between Bella and the newly ‘buff’ Jacob – for his role, Lautner bulked up considerably, a fact that it is impossible not to notice, spending so much time bare-chested, cinemagoers will undoubtedly leave with his rippling abs burned into their retinas. The first de-shirting is one of many that will cause more than a few giggles, and is something many critics will knock, but as Mark Kermode argues, the film clearly knows its target market (the teenage female) and really there is nothing wrong with the boys getting a little bit naked in face of the plethora of degrading female nudity seen accross the global media.

With more action, more melodrama, more staring and more angst, New Moon would seem on the face of it to be more of the same, but really this second episode has lost some of the quality and fun of the original, sadly making it less enjoyable as a result. Nevertheless, a solid effort that will please fans and Twi-hards alike and guaranteed to be box-office gold.
Rating: MMM+


