Breaking Dawn Part 2 Will Be Explosive

These days, fans are obsessing about "The Twilight Saga," especially as the final film in the franchise, "Breaking Dawn - Part 2," will be an explosive film hit. It is expected that the final film will reach potential record-breaking-type box office numbers. Already millions who have already bought tickets. So we can suppose the experts are predicting correctly as to the increasing popularity of the movie. MTV has provided a synopsis of the film:

The Plot
"After Bella (Kristen Stewart) nearly died during pregnancy in the last movie, her undead husband, Edward (Robert Pattinson), saved her by piercing her neck, thus at long last making a vampire out of her. Now with newborn Renesmee, baby makes three. Played by what look like digitally altered tots and an actual flesh-and-blood girl (Mackenzie Foy), Renesmee is the nominal centerpiece for the final movie and its reason for being. As half-human, half-vampire, and conceived while Bella was still breathing, Renesmee turns out to be an instant problem child. Not only does she look as creepy as the baby Brad Pitt in "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," she's sprouting as fast as a magical beanstalk and, worse yet, has attracted the attention of the Volturi, a vampire coven in Italy with papal-like authority. Led by Aro (a fabulous, flamboyant Michael Sheen), the Volturi come to believe that Renesmee is an "immortal child" whose milk teeth will instigate a large-scale calamity." — Manohla Dargis, Hollywood.com\

The Long Goodbye
"By the time the great vampire showdown finally got started, I was good and done with 'Breaking Dawn - Part 2.' But the big action scene is so campily over the top — with one twist so unforeseeable — that it sent me out on a burst of grudging goodwill. The film's endlessly drawn-out ending, with its multiple spoken and written iterations of the book's last word, 'forever,' over an image of the matte-skinned, cultishly beatific Cullens, may be the scariest moment in the whole pulpy yet vital Twilight series — a teenage girl's fantasy of perfect domestic contentment, frozen in time and doomed to last forever." — Dana Stevens, Slate.com

The Final Word
" 'Breaking Dawn - Part 2' starts off slow but gathers momentum, and that's because, with Bella and Edward united against the Volturi, the picture has a real threat. It's structured as a classic monster-movie showdown, and when the two are standing with their ragtag rebel team in the Northwest snow, facing Aro and his monk-hooded Volturi army, the film takes off -- into eye-popping violence and spectacle. ...And wait until you get to the twist ending! It's one of the most shocking moments in the series, yet also one of the lightest. It made me realize that, as narratively lumpy as they can be, I like the 'Twilight' films because they're really about the eternal movie romance of vampires at play." — Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly”
Evidently, it is the mystery and dark lure of the vampire which keeps on grabbing the attention of viewers. It is an esoteric world of the unknown which keeps people coming back for more. Breaking Dawn was released on August 2nd, 2008 and has been a hit ever since with a surplus of 1.3 million sold in the US within two days of the book’s release. Despite the initial controversy surrounding the nature and theme of the books, it has been a literary hit since its debut. Taking the screens has only skyrocketing its popularity.
“I’m kind of in denial,” one person said. “It’s just been such a big part of my life for four years.”

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