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Imagine if you will a troupe of vampires sieved through Jane Austen. "The Lost Boys" with burning loins, perhaps? The ...
Imagine if you will a troupe of vampires sieved through Jane Austen. "The Lost Boys" with burning loins, perhaps? The strange alchemy will no doubt offer up something akin to Stephanie Meyer's insanely popular Twilight Saga. The first film was passable at best, all stolen glances and chaste lip-biting but it suitably laid the groundwork for this, more adventurous, tale. At least we're now past first base with a bit of snogging and heavy petting! "The Twilight Saga: New Moon" is a different beast then, and there are a few beasties in this one besides. Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson or R Patz as the tabloids have affectionately dubbed him) is a touch more morose than usual when his other half, Bella (Kristen Stewart) decides to non-celebrate her birthday. Of course, mortality is a fickle mistress for a vampire and things go from bad to decidedly worse when Bella gets a paper cut... bad times when in the midst of some recovering, blood-feasting vampires. So, Ed high tails it out of there leaving Bella in a bind. There's a narked vamp after Bella's blood and the only refuge she can find is with local hottie Jacob (Taylor Lautner) who gets his top off... a lot. But the boy next door's got some secrets of his own and definitely shows a beastly temper when Bella starts banging on about her lost love. So, not only do you have a love triangle guaranteed to set tween hearts aflutter but, with the introduction of Team Jacob and his werewolf buddies, there's plenty of action too. It's the latter that is really pulled off with aplomb by director Chris Weitz ("The Golden Compass") and you feel, through these set-pieces, that more is at stake this time round. Albeit the effects work is still sub-par especially when Jacob and co get all feral. As for the performances, we're still, very much, in good-but-not-great territory. "New Moon" is pressing all the right buttons for those in the know but newcomers to the series will, like the Cullens, be emotionally numbed with little to get the heart racing. Stewart, when she's not screaming into her pillow, manages to muddle her way through whilst the Scene Stealer of The Day goes to Michael Sheen for his blink-and-you'll-miss-it turn as head of the Volturi. It's less Killer and more Filler this one but fans will get excited all over again for next year's "Eclipse" when R Patz returns to centre stage.
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Press Association
Not since Harry Potter first cast a spell over cinema audiences has a franchise based on a series of best-selling ...
Not since Harry Potter first cast a spell over cinema audiences has a franchise based on a series of best-selling novels been as completely critic-proof as The Twilight Saga. The good-looking cast could probably stare silently into the camera for two hours and fans of Stephenie Meyer's teen romances would still flock to multiplexes in their millions. Thankfully, Chris Weitz's eagerly anticipated rendering of the second instalment of the four-book saga is thoroughly entertaining and more polished than its predecessor. Hunky male leads Robert Pattinson and Taylor Lautner spend an inordinate amount of time with their shirts off, the latter sporting a washboard chest and abs that must have taken hours of work in a gym. New Moon is too long - 15 minutes of gloom and adolescent angst could easily have been excised from the opening act - but it's unlikely that the target audience will complain. Screenwriter Melissa Rosenberg sensibly spends the entire middle act establishing the love triangle that sustains not just this film but also the next, Eclipse, which is due in cinemas in July 2010. This is soap opera writ large, complete with a cliffhanger finale that leaves the audience teetering on the edge of their seats until next summer. The love affair between teenage misfit Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart) and vampire Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson) reaches a crossroads, and the paths ahead all lead to heartbreak. Edward and the Cullen clan - Dr Carlisle (Peter Facinelli), Esme (Elizabeth Reaser), Alice (Ashley Greene), Jasper (Jackson Rathbone), Emmett (Kellan Lutz) and Rosalie (Nikki Reed) - are forced to abandon the close-knit community of Forks, Washington if Bella is ever to be safe. "You just don't belong in my world," Edward tells his beloved. Abandoned by her soul(less) mate, the teenager becomes a shadow of her former self until her relationship with buffed-up family friend Jacob Black (Jacob Lautner) takes an exciting, new turn. Bloodthirsty predator Laurent (Ed Gathegi) returns to deal Bella a fatal blow at the behest of vengeful Victoria (Rachelle Lefevre) but a new protector is there in the girl's hour of need. The Twilight Saga: New Moon is glossy froth but it's extremely well made, apart from some of the digitally generated werewolves. The slavering carnivores lack the correct inertia and momentum, notably in a pivotal chase sequence. Weitz certainly likes his musical montages employing them almost back-to-back in the opening hour but like everything else in the film, they are polished to a sheen. Stewart teases out her heroine's internal anguish as Bella finds herself torn between morose Edward and hot-blooded Jacob. "I'm not like a car you can fix up. I'm never gonna run right," she tells the Quileute tribe member, in a half-hearted attempt to ward him off. Romantic scenes with Lautner smoulder just as much as with Pattinson, which bodes well for the next film.
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