#especially considering the fact that he already has so many muffins to eat. (previous ask from different sender)
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habitual-creatures Ā· 5 months ago
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Only 12
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Let's just say there's a reason he hasn't been eating well...
(( I apologize for the poor sketch quality, poor posing, etc. I tried to do this quick before i forgot my idea. May touch up in it and make a "better" one eventually, but I probably won't... anywho. This was the idea I had because of the cookies thing! ))
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therealvinelle Ā· 4 years ago
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Vinelle (and muffin since I know they'll see this too~!), I don't know if you guys have made a post ranking the Twilight books and why (including Bree and L&D if applicable) but I'd love to hear your opinions! (also if you could rank the Twi movies from least worst to most worst and why that'd be awesome too! 030 hi key love your rants on the movies and would love to hear y'alls thoughts more on them)-Sw
Youā€™ve caught us out, anon.
And thanks to you, we spent last night watching Breaking Dawn Part 2 so we could rank it. @theoriginalcarnivorousmuffin hadnā€™t seen it at all, while I half-remembered it from years ago. A terrible time was had because that movie was unwatchably bad.
Since this ask was sent jointly, our answer was co-written.
So, without further ado, movies first:
1. Twilight
This is a bad movie, but itā€™s recognizably a movie. The scenes are connected, there are things it did well, and we could tell you what the plot is. The awkwardness, for instance, is very well done. The weaknesses are glaring, the main one being that the film never sells us on the characters of Bella and Edward, nor on their relationship, relying instead on the audience knowing theyā€™re in love because- well, theyā€™re in love.
Diving deeper into Edward and Bella, thereā€™s an understandable explanation for this. Edward of the books is terrifying, and I donā€™t think thereā€™s a translation to screen that could have kept the romantic atmosphere surrounding him that we see from Bellaā€™s point of view.
Bella can listen to Edward eating Biology and how he explains that it means how much he loves her and not blink. An actual audience hearing that dialogue will have second thoughts.
Right out of the gate, Twilight has a very difficult task: Salvage Edward Cullen while still producing a somewhat recognizable character who will take the same actions (or near the same actions) that Edward Cullen did in the book.
In the effort to make Edward palatable but save some of his original character he loses his more terrifying lines (as well as his hilarious ego) but becomes weird, awkward, and vaguely creepy. Edward Cullen of the films is that weird, friendless guy in your high school who you feel kind of bad for but donā€™t want to eat lunch with.
Bella faces a similar transformation. Bellaā€™s insecurity is completely removed (or else the screenwriters somehow failed to notice it). As a result, we get this strange antisocial girl who is too cool for school because sheā€™s a stuck up bitch.
Between Edward, this creepy guy who sits next to her in Biology, and Bella, this girl who enters school too good for everyone else, we see no reason why they would ever be interested in one another.
In an attempt to make these characters likeable they made them both unlikeable and boring. The film series as a whole never recovers from this (indeed, the quest to make Edward look good keeps leading to stranger and stranger places).Ā 
It also forgets to explain why the Cullens live among humans, theyā€™re attending high schoolā€¦ because. Itā€™s a movie that explained to us all those terrible 2010 era memes and ā€œstill a better love story than Twilightā€. And frankly, those memes were great, better than the movie. Case in point.
Everything is weirdly blue, which is atmospheric but also makes everything and everyone washed out. Everyone is super pale, so you have Mike looking just as vampire-y as Edward. However, itā€™s recognizably a movie. It introduces the characters, recognizes that the audience needs to be informed of things that are important to the plot, and most scenes are in some way connected to the plot. This is more than can be said for the other films, which is why it lands the top slot.
2. Eclipse
Eclipse earns its second place by process of elimination. The remaining three were worse. Eclipse also features Edward being cuckolded mercilessly, which is hilarious. Oh, and Victoria playing Riley, that was another beautiful scene.
Apart from that itā€™s just a deeply boring, borderline unwatchable movie.
Special shoutouts go to:
The opening scene of Riley getting turned, a ridiculous and poorly executed scene that served no purpose for the movie whatsoever.
Rosalie dropping her backstory without any context, Bella walks up to her and Rosalie launches into this horrific story for no particular reason. Both her and Jasperā€™s backstories could have been cut, as they served no purpose to the story and felt really thrown in there.
The many, many redundant scenes. The Victoria chase that ends with the Cullens and Quileutes squabbling could have been cut entirely. So too could the Seattle subplot with the newborns and Bree.
Itā€™s a movie that isnā€™t about anything in particular, so it throws subplot spaghetti at the wall to see what sticks. It dutifully regurgitates the Jacob/Bella/Edward love triangle while also trying to convey that Bellaā€™s about to lose her mortality, while also trying to introduce suspense and excitement with the newborns. It fails to execute either of these, and it also fails to tie them together.
3. New Moon
The movie that wanted to skip itself.
This movie had two jobs, show that Bella is depressed when Edward leaves and convince the audience of Bella and Jacobā€™s strong friendship. And apart the rotating shots and the occasional Stewart voiceover, the former becomes one of those ā€œjust stay with us on this one, guysā€ failures, and the second is failed on every level. Jake and Bella are much closer at the beginning of this movie than they were in canon, and a montage of Bella hanging out with her buddy is just that, itā€™s a montage of Bella hanging out with her buddy. It speaks volumes that Stewartā€™s voiceover has to remind us sheā€™s depressed and Jacob is helping her heal, because thereā€™s no indicator on screen that this is happening.
This, in turn, makes Bella/Jake as weak and unconvincing as Bella/Edward was in the previous movie. We just have to take on faith that these people are important to each other because thatā€™s what weā€™re told.
Thereā€™s also the wolves, who are completely butchered. In the books, thereā€™s this great mystery with bears in the woods, thereā€™s Bella wondering why Laurent ran off, thereā€™s build-up, then when we find out whatā€™s actually been happening itā€™s a satisfying explanation, all the pieces come together really nicely. This is not the case in the movie. Meeting the pack is just weird in this context, because we never wondered who they were. Bella is randomly invited to breakfast, we meet Emily with the scarred face who wonā€™t ever have a line again, and thatā€™s it, these characters donā€™t become important to the movie in any way. Itā€™s a pointless scene that could have been cut, much like so many other scenes in these movies.
Apart from that, the Volturi scene from the books is butchered so I hardly recognize it, and Alice, Carlisle, and Edwardā€™s characters are assassinated to an impressive degree considering they were barely in the movie.
It was hard to watch.
It lands third place because somehow, Breaking Dawn was worse.
4. Breaking Dawn Part Two
Iā€™ll just list the positives: the intro was very pretty and promised a better movie. It was also long, which we appreciated because it took away from the movieā€™s runtime. (This is not at all an exaggeration, a lot of the time watching all five movies was spent looking at the remaining runtime and groaning.) The Tommy Wiseau sex scene in the sex cabin was uncomfortable, but the fact that it would have fit perfectly in The Room made it funny. The Romanians were genuinely, unironically, great, because of all of Carlisleā€™s trashy friends, these were the only ones the movie didnā€™t try to convince us werenā€™t trashy.
This movie ranks above Breaking Dawn Part One because of the things listed above.
Apart from that, something all of these movies, but especially the last four, suffer from is that they donā€™t have plots so much as they have a check list of things to put in the movie before they can call it a wrap. This movie is the worst offender of that, and itā€™s made worse by the filmā€™s expectation that the people are fans who already know whatā€™s happening, and therefore donā€™t need anything explained. Iā€™ll explain what we mean by that.
We get Bella waking up a vampire, and absolutely nothing is explained. If you donā€™t know what happened in the last movie then fuck you. Bella then goes hunting, we get the hiker, we get the mountain lion, she goes back to meet RenesmĆ©e, finds out Jake imprinted on her daughter, we get the sex cabin, the handwrestling with Emmett. The Charlie problem is introduced (poorly), only to be solved a scene later with emotional payoff that had absolutely no buildup. All of these things, and the rest of the movie as well for that matter, feels like weā€™re just crossing items off a list.
Since the audience is expected to already know the story, the story only bothers to explain about half of whatā€™s happening, if half. Whoā€™s the lady living with Charlie? If you donā€™t know, donā€™t worry because itā€™s not important anyway. When did Kate and Garrett fall in love? If you donā€™t care, that's understandable, because theyā€™ve barely interacted in the movie. Who are the Amazonian women? Do they have names? Donā€™t worry about it. Did Alistair actually leave, if so did that have an impact? Well, Bella stared at a window for a few seconds.
Every so often the characters will start quoting the books, and itā€™ll be completely out of place because these movies veered off course long ago. Carlisle references his great friendship with Aro, a friendship that was only briefly mentioned at the beginning of the second movie. Aro randomly starts talking about how scary human technology is.
All of these scenes feel like Marcus is telling the story, heā€™s just listing events waiting for the story to be over, and forgets a lot of pertinent details because he doesnā€™t care enough to remember them. Thereā€™s no effort to tie these scenes together, no effort to build up to anything.
Thereā€™s also one significant failure, and this is a failure shared by all five films, but it affects the plot (I use the term ā€œplotā€ loosely) of this movie which is why it gets a special shoutout here. Vampires in these movies look human. The fact that Bella has to ask Edward is Gianna the secretary is human says it all, because in the books you know instantly, thereā€™s not even a question. This makes the Charlie subplot ridiculous, because Bella looks and acts the same as ever. She had a trashy makeover, maybe, but sheā€™s still Bella. Watching her get human acting classes after we watched her act perfectly human is just silly. Now, weā€™re all for suspension of belief, but this movie just pencil drew a moustache on her and the audience is supposed to go ā€œMy god, Bella, I didnā€™t recognize you!ā€
We then get to the atrocious fight scene, which was somehow worse than I remembered. It was also oddly long for a giant fake out. This scene took significant run time and it turns out to have 0 effect on the plot. And when we get back to the real world, the tonal shift is extreme. You canā€™t go from Jane being choked, dragged across the snow and face eaten by a wolf to her standing around chilling. We could have skipped it entirely, just had Alice touch Aroā€™s hand, and he goes ā€œAh, I see, cheerio.ā€
The end credits were pretty funny, ā€œhere are these random characters with bit parts in previous movies, isnā€™t this nostalgic?ā€. Nice try, movie. The fact this came after an extended clip show of the great romance of Edward and Bella, through blurry montage images that failed to be convincing in their original films let alone this one, just made it even more hilarious. Hope you didnā€™t completely ruin the directorā€™s career, though honestly you should a bit.
5. Breaking Dawn Part One
As you can probably tell by the above entries, the fact that this is the worst one is really saying something. All the movies were hard to watch, but this one required pure strength of will to power through.
The big issue is that Breaking Dawn shouldnā€™t have been split in the first place. However, it was, and that meant that we got a movie that was almost entirely filler. (Followed, somehow, by a movie that was also largely filler.)
We get everybody preparing for the wedding. What do Mike and Jessica think of Bella and Edward getting married? Whatā€™s that, you donā€™t care? Well, now you know anyway. We get the full wedding, as in the whole fucking thing, including the afterparty. We get Bella and Edward traveling to their island, and thereā€™s filler in the filler where they go clubbing in Rio. We then get every minute detail of the wedding night followed by every minute detail of the honeymoon.
Thereā€™s fanservice, and then thereā€™s this. This was live action fanfiction.
NOTHING that in any way is relevant to the story happens, the closest we get is Irina looking stoned. Too bad the Denaliā€™ refusal to help out in Eclipse was cut from the last movie, in fact Iā€™m not sure they were mentioned at all previously in these movies (I think maybe Edward had a one-line reference in Twilight?) so this means nothing to people who havenā€™t read the books.
We then get to the pregnancy arc, which could have been Rosemaryā€™s Baby but is instead as outrageously boring as the first half of the movie was. The director must have realized as much, because he gives us Jacobā€™s alpha plot that should have been cut from the movie (yes, I know it was in the books, but the thing about adaptations is that things have to go. For the record, I think Meyer should have cut it too). That subplot was straight out of an anime, by the way. Jacob claiming his ancestral rights as alpha while listing off his titles and the soaring music, wasā€¦ every shounen anime, ever. Complete with the shitty voice acting.
It was a soul-crushingly boring movie.
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Something that screws over the last four movies is that they were made to feed the fangirls, and generate revenue because the producers knew the fans were coming to watch the books they liked come to life, so they just had to throw scenes from the books and into the movies and let the magic happen. This is a terrible way to adapt something.
Special shoutout too to having to watch Taylor Lautner run around shirtless in four out of five movies. That was very uncomfortable and none of us needed that in our lives, Lautner included.
Super special shoutout to the fact that we disagree with nearly all the casting.
And this isnā€™t the post for that, but all of the characters were butchered. Some more than others, and some more insidiously than others. Itā€™s the big things, like Carlisleā€™s character being turned on its head since he thinks all vampires are damned, exactly the opposite of what he thinks in the books, and the little things, like Jasper and Bella being buddies who bicker fondly in New Moon.Ā 
Then the books:
1. Midnight Sun
HANDS DOWN. This is easily our favorite thing to come out of the entire Twilight franchise.
Edward is every kind of crazy at the same time, all the time, and it makes every single sentence packed with delirious entertainment. Reading this book is having a stroke, a psychotic episode, and watching five different true crime shows all at once. We adore every letter of it. (Thatā€™s no exaggeration, we even laughed about Edward capitalizing ā€œSonā€ when Carlisle refers to him as ā€œsonā€ in conversation.)
The book was more than weā€™d dared to hope for, one of those rare books that makes you go ā€œThis was written just for me.ā€
2. Twilight
The one that started it all.
Vampires are wonderfully creepy. Things like Bella staring at Carlisle acting like the mundane town doctor shortly after learning just how old he is, Alice explaining how vampires kill all, and the uncanny valley perfection of the Cullens all add to the otherness of these vampires, and the general atmosphere of the book.
The love story is convincing. Edward seen through the eyes of Bella is wonderful, the red flags are there but if it werenā€™t for the books that followed we wouldnā€™t have decried the ship the way we do.
3. Eclipse
Breaking Dawn is the more interesting book, but Eclipse has less things we outright donā€™t like. We get to know all the characters better, Edward and Bella are their usual beautiful selves, and itā€™s overall peak Twilight.
4. Breaking Dawn
Would have ranked much higher, we like what it did. Without it we wouldnā€™t be in this fandom now, as it brought so much amazing content. The baby plot is fine by us, Carlisleā€™s friends are great, the Volturi confrontation is a beautiful, if bleak culmination of preventable events. Thereā€™s a lot of great stuff in this book.
Unfortunately, and thereā€™s just no diplomatic way to put this, so Iā€™ll just come out with it: thereā€™s too much Jacob.
He no longer had a reason to be in the story, given the way Eclipse ended he had every reason not to be in it. In spite of that we get an entire third of the book from his point of view, and then damned if heā€™s not shoehorned into the last third as well. He added absolutely nothing to the story, he was just there taking up space and being possessive of a toddler. His POV section was tough to get through, and his presence in book three was just painful. He should have been cut.
5. New Moon
This was the book we had to power through. There are some very good things in it, most notably the Volturi scene, but the Muffin and I enjoy Twilight for the vampires, and that makes Laurent and Hallucination!Edward the highlights of the part of the book where Edward is gone.
Thereā€™s also the fact that Jacob isnā€™t a very compelling character. He has to carry the book now that the Cullens arenā€™t doing it, and he simply isnā€™t up for it.
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Yes, weā€™re aware that these books are ranked according to how much Jacob is in them. We donā€™t even hate him, not at all, itā€™s just that heā€™s boring.
(That being said, the books at their worst are better than the movies at their best. Jacob narrating his perfect playdate with RenesmĆ©e would still be preferable toā€¦ Iā€™m trying to think of a good scene from the movies. Hm, nevermind.)
As for The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner and Life and Death, only I have read Bree Tanner and I donā€™t remember it well enough to give a proper assessment. I was bored with the OCs, though, bored to tears, throughout that book I was itching for Victoria and the Cullens. We have not read Life and Death, but weā€™re offended by its existence so it ranks bottom.
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