About the Author

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Born under the star of Capricorn, in the year of the Metal OX, I grew up to the music of the Beatles and witnessed the Ate Guy and Ate Vi fan-feuds, Toyota-Crispa rivalry, and the Thrilla in Manila on TV. Currently I am a friar of the Order of St. Augustine with some nine years of experience in webmastering and a lot more years in being a priest and a teacher. I am at the moment located somewhere in Laguna, Philippines, animating Basic Ecclesial Communities and teaching part-time. I run quite a few websites including AgustinongPinoy, Res Biblica, The Bible Workshop, the Collectanea Informatica and the Mystical Geek.

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Twilight

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Twilight.  It is supposed to be a film about teenage vampires.  It  is much ballyhooed.  My niece wrote something about it.  I must admit I was thinking of her review when I saw the movie.  I saw it on DVD, and here are my impressions…

Two outsiders get attracted to one another.  Bella, a new student, very accepted at her new school, meets Edward Cullen, a mystery boy and outsider of sorts, and are attracted to one another.  Complications arise when it turns out that Edward is a vampire.  Bella learns about it gradually.  In a near auto accident, Edward saves her from getting hit by a speeding car, literally shielding her with an arm.  Then, in an out of town trip, he saves her from four men who were about to waylay her.  It was then that she noticed how her eyes turned color and that his skin was cold as ice.  Finally, Edward opens himself up to her and tells her what he feels about her:  the initial repulsion-attraction “thing” he has towards her, and the fact that he can no longer keep himself away from her.

That’s the first part of the story.  There is a second thread however that is anticipated in the scenes where murders are committed by vampires who feed.  This thread is developed in the appearance of another group of vampires different from the group of Edward and his family.  The groups meet while the Cullen family stage a family baseball match in the middle of a thunderstorm .  Bella was playing with the family when the other group appears.  One of these, the hunter, gets a whiff of Bella’s scent  and gets interested in her.  At this point, the Cullen family begin to protect Bella as their own.  The vampire tracker actually succeeds in getting very close to Bella but she is again saved by Edward.  Finally, the tracker is destroyed by the Cullen boys and Bella is brought to a hospital to recover.  The story does not end there however, there is a conclusion that is not really conclusion since it opens the door to a possible Twilight II.

A third  thread pits a group of Indians whose leader is a personal friend of Bella’s dad with the Cullen group.  In an episode about a beach-outing, Bella talks to a childhood friend, the Chief’s son — Jacob — about the Cullens.  From him she learns of a legend about the Cullen family and the places where they can be.  According to the legend, the Cullen family — supposedly descended from werewolves — was caught hunting in Indian grounds; they entered into a pact with the Indians in which territories were drawn.  On the night of the prom, when Edward and Bella prepare to join the party, the Chief’s son, talks to Bella about breaking up with Edward.  The animosity between Edward and the Chief’s son was shown.   Where does the animosity arise?  I suspect it is because of the animosity between vampires and werewolves, something that has been explored in recent hollywood productions (e.g. Underworld).

Finally, there is another thread that is suggested at the end of the movie.  The last image of the film showing James’ vampire girlfriend suggests that Twilight only has a momentary happy ending.

The movie is a high school love story with vampire characters.  It has a weak story line and the performances of the actors leave a lot to be desired. (I agree with my niece here).   What the story does however is to make vampires more acceptable.  Recent movies have made the “monsters” of a previous generation more acceptable.  The scenes where Edward shows Bella his world as he employs his superpowers is no different from what Superman does with Lois Lane  or Spiderman with the love of his life.

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What I liked about the movie is the screenplay.  It is so well constructed that one can trace how scenes lead to another and how the whole story line moves from the introduction to conflict, climax and a momentary resolution.  This is an aspect of hollywood movies that no Filipino movie can ever replicate so long as our producers and directors think only of making use of current fads to gain money.  That is the reason too why a Filipino version of Twilight will not work.  Twilight was made based on a good story.  A Filipino version of it — as happens in a lot of our movies recently — will be based on scenes copied from Twilight; it won’t have a story line just scenes where the “idols” of the moment are exploited.

Lastly, I won’t be surprised if a TV-series spinoff would come out in the near future.  Twilight already has a cult-following.  A TV-series that exploits the story-line won’t be a surprise.  Besides, a TV-series called Moonlight, and before that, a Buffy The Vampire-Killer spinoff involving Angel, has made vampires living in the midst of mortal men acceptable.

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