Studio: Summit Entertainment
Director: Bill Condon
Screenwriter: Melissa Rosenberg
Starring: Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Taylor Lautner, Peter Facinelli, Ashley Greene, Kellan Lutz, Jackson Rathbone, Elizabeth Reaser, Nikki Reed, Billy Burke, Rami Malek, Maggie Grace, Mackenzie Foy, Tracey Heggins, Judi Shekoni, Omar Metwally, Andrea Gabriel, Rami Malek, Angela Sarafyan, Marlane Barnes, Lisa Howard, Patrick Brennan, Noel Fisher, Guri Weinberg, Lee Pace, Toni Trucks, Bill Tangradi, Erik Odom, Valorie Curry, Joe Anderson, Olga Fonda, Janelle Froehlich, Masami Kosaka, Sebastiao Lemos, Amadou Ly, Ty Olsson, Wendell Pierce, Carolina Virguez
Movie Review:
After a fairy tale wedding, leaving Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson) and Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart) for a honeymoon just as delicious to a remote destination. The honeymoon is cut short when Bella discovers she is pregnant and a half-vampire baby to come. Her frail body could hardly cope with rapidly changing body and add to the problems of the couple are aggressive werewolves who are Hell Bent to stop the introduction of the new arrival. Can old friend Jacob (Taylor Lautner) save the day? More importantly, can Edward and Bella are the proud parents of a new species ...
Bella (Kristen Stewart) has played her role concisely for two years as the irresistible human entree of Edward Cullen’s eye (Robert Pattinson), but now their love, having overcome many typical obstacles, has resulted in marriage, where this film begins. Edward and Bella go on their honeymoon, which, despite resulting in the conception of their demon spawn, is really quite humorous and quenches the audience’s thirst to see the duo finally act like a normal hormone-driven teenage couple.
One pint of fresh blood is pumped in love in the body of the Twilight movie-monster for installation penultimate, writes Georgina Watson. In this desire dropper, emotional play of a supernatural thriller, the young couple of vampire Edward Cullen and Bella prepare for their toughest battle to date - the first year of marriage. From each of the three movies before that, with the book, Breaking Dawn Part One owes its success to all the fantasies of the popularity of adolescent sexual desire and love of the soul that it consumes.