Melissa Rosenberg Explains Four New Moon ‘Tweaks’
Hope Bella Got a Gift Receipt …
In one narrative device Melissa is particularly proud of, Jacob gives Bella a Quileute trinket meant to capture bad dreams — although, judging by all those late-night shots of Kristen Stewart in tears, it doesn’t work very well. “One of my favorite things is the dream-catcher that Jacob gives Bella,” the screenwriter said. “It’s the first time that we see Jacob, and I wanted to establish his and Bella’s relationship, his sort-of crush. [The gift establishes] her affection for him and Edward’s jealousy of him. So I had the idea that he brought her a little birthday gift and came up with the dream-catcher, which would be true to his culture but also to the theme of the movie; there’s a lot of dreams in this movie. That, I thought, played well.”Getting the Cullen Kicked Out of Him …
In Meyer’s novel, the Volturi scenes are a moody medley of tension, fear and careful wordplay. In the movie, however, Felix lays the smack-down on Edward as he tries to protect Bella. Like many scenes, Rosenberg said she needed to up the visuals to take the place of lost narrative nuances. “In the book, at the very end, the final climatic scene is Edward and Bella and Alice going to the Volturi and the potential that they might not walk out of there,” she said. “It is very fraught with tension, but the tension is expressed through dialogue, and I wanted to heighten that. I wanted to have that conflict be external. So I pushed it into an all-out-battle, and Chris [Weitz] and the stunt people, along with ['X-Men' star] Daniel Cudmore who plays Felix, did this great action sequence at the end that’s just really fantastic.”
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November 25th, 2009 at 12:14 PM
I loved all of the changes, particularly the clever dreamcatcher gift and how Harry’s heart failed after being attacked by Victoria.
November 25th, 2009 at 3:22 PM
Agreed. I thought a good number of the changes were appropriate. There are just some things in text that cannot be captured in movies, unless changes are made.