Monday, November 19, 2012

IMMORTALITY for the CULLENS.

Russovoir thinks life could have been bitter and empty if he had read the four (4) books of the The Twilight Saga, spoiling the heart-stopping - at the same time, blood-draining - finale of the franchise.

Quick tip: Hollywood has this habit of turning books to movies. And having read them, knowing the ending, is a bit of a thrill killer. One way to circumvent this is to leave out the final chapters of the book that you personally think will ruin the mood of its anticipated film. I have done this to the The Hunger Games Trilogy. On the other hand, not reading them at all is another thing once to often blissful.

Russovoir knows a good plot if he sees one. Absolutely regardless of what the minority - a good plenty - thinks otherwise. The onset of the The Twilight Saga interests Russovoir not because of who played what nor what is remotely applicable to society, to relationships. It has always been about the innovative approach of the saga. It was risky for Stephanie Meyer, the author, to frankly distort the universally recognized and accepted image of a vampire: their lifestyle, their strengths, weaknesses, their physical and mental dispositions. But that's the intention of creative writers. To distort. To invent. To think outside the box. For that, Meyer is immortalized by her craft.

Now the aesthetics of the blood-curdling finale, no spoilers.

Kristen Stewart. Absolutely - fucking - amazing; Edward Cullen's very words himself. The public eye knows of her as expressionless and vapid. Up until she turned, Stewart only stayed true to the character of Bella, an overthinker by which there are grave consequences on the horizon. Peculiar behavior of Swan writhe Russovoir as if a pair of fangs stung deep when it was revealed. Stewart, and Russovoir has always thought so, is one valuable actress by attributable roles.

"So beautiful. We're in the same temperature now."
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 answers all questions of the critics. It ties all loose ends, coming to a full circle as lingering in which insatiable as the Harry Potter series. It must be a bane to society - the intolerant society, slowly forgotten as succeeding authors create their own versions of vampires, werewolves, and how vampires should not sparkle, and what a "better love story" should be, but Russovoir, God as his witness, The Twilight Saga is one of the greatest novels ever written. Ambitiously risky - how books should be.  


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