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The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1

  • 2011
  • PG-13
  • 1h 57m
IMDb RATING
4.9/10
267K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,529
94
Kristen Stewart, Taylor Lautner, and Robert Pattinson in The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1 (2011)
The Quileute and the Volturi close in on expecting parents Edward and Bella, whose unborn child poses different threats to the wolf pack and vampire coven.
Play trailer2:31
40 Videos
99+ Photos
Coming-of-AgeAdventureDramaFantasyRomanceThriller

The Quileutes close in on expecting parents Edward and Bella, whose unborn child poses a threat to the Wolf Pack and the towns people of Forks.The Quileutes close in on expecting parents Edward and Bella, whose unborn child poses a threat to the Wolf Pack and the towns people of Forks.The Quileutes close in on expecting parents Edward and Bella, whose unborn child poses a threat to the Wolf Pack and the towns people of Forks.

  • Director
    • Bill Condon
  • Writers
    • Melissa Rosenberg
    • Stephenie Meyer
  • Stars
    • Kristen Stewart
    • Robert Pattinson
    • Taylor Lautner
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.9/10
    267K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,529
    94
    • Director
      • Bill Condon
    • Writers
      • Melissa Rosenberg
      • Stephenie Meyer
    • Stars
      • Kristen Stewart
      • Robert Pattinson
      • Taylor Lautner
    • 457User reviews
    • 333Critic reviews
    • 45Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 11 wins & 22 nominations total

    Videos40

    Trailer #2
    Trailer 2:31
    Trailer #2
    UK Trailer
    Trailer 1:58
    UK Trailer
    UK Trailer
    Trailer 1:58
    UK Trailer
    Trailer Preview
    Trailer 0:18
    Trailer Preview
    The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1
    Trailer 1:59
    The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1
    Bill Condon on Directing J.Lo, Making Twilight Sing, and the Best Movie Musicals
    Clip 5:34
    Bill Condon on Directing J.Lo, Making Twilight Sing, and the Best Movie Musicals
    "We Need More Blood"
    Clip 0:32
    "We Need More Blood"

    Photos280

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    Top cast61

    Edit
    Kristen Stewart
    Kristen Stewart
    • Bella Swan
    Robert Pattinson
    Robert Pattinson
    • Edward Cullen
    Taylor Lautner
    Taylor Lautner
    • Jacob Black
    Gil Birmingham
    Gil Birmingham
    • Billy
    Billy Burke
    Billy Burke
    • Charlie Swan
    Sarah Clarke
    Sarah Clarke
    • Renee
    Ty Olsson
    Ty Olsson
    • Phil
    Ashley Greene
    Ashley Greene
    • Alice Cullen
    Jackson Rathbone
    Jackson Rathbone
    • Jasper Hale
    Peter Facinelli
    Peter Facinelli
    • Dr. Carlisle Cullen
    Elizabeth Reaser
    Elizabeth Reaser
    • Esme Cullen
    Kellan Lutz
    Kellan Lutz
    • Emmett Cullen
    Nikki Reed
    Nikki Reed
    • Rosalie Hale
    Christian Sloan
    Christian Sloan
    • Unsavory Man
    James Pizzinato
    James Pizzinato
    • Unsavory Man
    Ian Harmon
    • Unsavory Man
    Gabriel Carter
    Gabriel Carter
    • Unsavory Man
    Anna Kendrick
    Anna Kendrick
    • Jessica
    • Director
      • Bill Condon
    • Writers
      • Melissa Rosenberg
      • Stephenie Meyer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews457

    4.9266.6K
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    Featured reviews

    rachel-106-881197

    Dragging out what should be a quick ending.

    I like twilight. i wouldn't say i LOVE it, but i found the books to be amusing, warm and a good time waster. The movies seem to be more about capitalising on funds rather than delivering a decent plot.

    i've never been a fan of Kristin Stewart (insipid droning teenager that she is in all of the movieS) but she actually appears to present somewhat of a decent acting skill in this movie, whereas cold, boring edward (who in the books was a heart-throb) is just as terribly pathetic as he was in the previous movies. The man that has stolen the show, taylor lautner, since he took his shirt off in the second movie was pushed into the background a little bit in this movie, which i think was the worst thing they could have done. but, in the same token, they had to do as its a love story between edward and bella, not bella and jacob. I'm just a little disappointed by the way they've dragged this on. but i was disappointed by the books towards the end too.

    We took our whole office at the penrith professionals and there were mixed reviews. The oldies hated it, the middle agers (who knew the basic plot line of the movie) found it a nice romance but fairly boring and the young girls loved it for the sheer fact it was twilight.

    I wouldn't see it again, thats for sure.
    5Scrugulus

    OK, but without much content

    There is not much happening altogether in this film. They put way too much focus on the wedding and the honeymoon, thus wasting precious time. But I guess all those teenage girl fans wanted a full portrayal of the big romantic wedding.

    In all of the previous films, I liked the acting of most of the cast a lot. But in this film, everyone except Bella, Edward & Jacob is marginalised to such an extent that there cannot be much said about them. As an audience you just don't get to see enough of any of them to really develop a connection with or care about them.

    Altogether this is an OK addition to the franchise, by no means worse than the disappointing/confusing 2nd or 3rd films. I assume I will give this film either a 5 or a 6 (out of 10), but I think I will withhold my final vote until I have seen part 2. I know some might say that they are released as separate films and therefore should be treated as such, but as the original book is ripped into two halves here, I think it is fair to reserve the final judgement until I have seen the two films in conjunction (seeing that, as I haven't read the books, I will need to have seen both films in order to make sense of it all).
    60U

    Breaking Dawn

    I'd say, stay for the first 15 minutes then come back for the last 20 minutes, just so that you can skip all of the nonsense in between. Surprisingly, the werewolves have taken a dire turn in this franchise which is a crying shame because their presence in the two other films were refreshing and light handed. In one of the worst scenes ever, they all confront each other through telepathy which is hard to watch because the voice acting is so out of place. The wedding scene was gratuitous and the birth scene was ripped out from the pages of hell. Bizzare.
    4freemantle_uk

    Edward and Bella finally have sex

    No matter what I or any one else say, there will be a lot of people who have already made up their minds on whether they are going to The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1 and the most positive or negative reviews will never change that. Opinions between Twi-hards and Twi-haters are extremely polarised, but it is my duty to give an honest opinion on the latest chapter of the saga.

    It has finally happened. Edward (Robert Pattinson) and Bella (Kristen Stewart) have tied the knot and, despite some pre-wedding nerves, it seems like a success. The two lovers spend their honeymoon on a tropical island off the coast of Brazil and we get the moment we have all been waiting for: they finally have sex. But a shock is in store when Bella ends up pregnant (remember kids, always practise safe sex) and the human-vampire foetus is killing her from the inside. As the Cullens try to save Bella, the Quileute tribe set out to kill her and the child, believing it will be a threat and abomination. Jacob (Taylor Lautner) ends up being torn between his loyalty to the tribe, his hatred for Edward, and his love for Bella.

    There is a new trend in Hollywood to split book adaptations into two parts. It made sense with Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, because that was a long novel with a many elements that were interlinked and it needed to be told in two parts, but "Breaking Dawn Part 1" was trying to stretch the material to fit the allocated time. There are numerous montages, such as the honeymoon, which could have easily been shortened to make a single, stronger movie. The film had very little plot too; it's basically about a complicated pregnancy that just happened to feature vampires and werewolves.

    There is a melodramatic tone throughout, amplified by the music, whether it was the piano-heavy soft moments, the epic score (often played over non-epic moments), or the emo rock songs. A little melodrama is fine, but it goes on for most of the movie, and when there is little hook of a story, it just becomes a drag. Even people who are fans to the series will admit that dialogue has never been its strong suit. Bill Condon attempts to make the sex scene and honeymoon to be tender, but it came off more sappy and overbearing.

    "Part 1's" strength is that it is the best-acted of the series. Stewart certainly gives it a good go and Lautner gives what is a half-way decent performance. Pattinson was slumming it, but with some of the cheesy dialogue he has to say, even someone like Laurence Olivier would have struggled.

    Condon does have a few moments of visual darkness, including the dream sequence in the beginning with its juxtaposition of bright white clothing and blood and Bella and Edward standing on top of a load of corpses. The birth scene was actually intense and gory. But these are counter-balanced with goofy moments, one of the most infamous being a psychic werewolf argument.

    The whole wedding sequence and honeymoon plays like a young girl's fantasy, sort of idealistic. This is fine, but hardly dramatic and not likely to have wide appeal.

    Previous "Twilight" movies have had some interesting side issues that could and should have been explored. This is not the case with "Part 1." There are no issues of a man resisting his urges and dark side, a young teen forced into being a vampire, an army of powerful new vampires being formed and the idea of there being a vampire council. There is nothing like that. The few themes there are include a look into Edward's past, a brief debate about abortion and the idea of imprinting, which is basically brainwashing. A better idea could be looking at somebody forcing someone else to love them. That would be a dark story.

    "Breaking Dawn Part 1" is the weakest movie in the series I have seen so far and I speak as someone who is neutral to the overall experience.

    Please visit www.entertainmentfuse.com
    5arunhappyman

    Bad work

    The movie is not to the level of expectation. Although, the book is better, it is hard to represent everything in visual. The worst part of the movie is releasing it as two parts. Anyway let bygones be bygones. The performance of Kristen is fantastic. But the rest of the team don't support her performance. The nocturnal fight can be made better with little increase in brightness. Twilight series is in the high level of expectation to the people who don't read book. Let us expect some good plot in conclusion.

    One famous critic says the following. " Based on a portion of the popular teen romance book "Breaking Dawn" this slow-moving film has long periods of inaction and generates little suspense, making it the worst film in the "Twilight Saga" films so far. This movie seems to be a mere multimillion dollar bookmark, marking time until the overarching story is finally concluded in the last film. Short on plot developments and long on inaction, the characters spend much of the film waiting for something, anything to happen.

    This third film in the Twilight Saga opens with the marriage of the human Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart) to the vampire Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson). This is followed by the honeymoon in South America. A good deal of time is spent in transit to and from South America. Although a private jet is involved in this trip, most of the traveling scenes are in cars or limousines. These are awkward sequences where nothing really happens. When the newlyweds finally have sex, the act is underplayed, and not repeated during the honeymoon. Once again, the chastity theme comes to the fore as the husband broods over the safety of his wife and his wife's bruises resulting from his partial loss of self-control during sex.

    So the bride and groom are on their honeymoon on a fancy island resort, but they are still waiting for something else to happen, namely the act of turning Bella into an vampire. Why they don't just go ahead and get it over with isn't explained very well. When Bella's other boyfriend, Jacob the werewolf (Taylor Lautner) finds out about this human-vampire honeymoon idea, he thinks it is crazy. While everyone is waiting for Bella to become a vampire, something else happens. Bella becomes pregnant. This, of course, requires more waiting to see what happens with the pregnancy.

    After more limo scenes, the bride and groom head back to the family compound in Washington where they spend the rest of the film waiting to find out what happens with the baby. More waiting, more interminable chastity. Just like any marriage. There is a brief flurry of action at the end of the film when another battle between the vampires and werewolves starts to flare up, for no good reason, by the way. During all this, amazingly, nobody bothers to tell Bella's father that she might be dying, or that she has decided to join the undead vampires anyway, even if she survives the birth. Instead, Bella lies to her father, telling him she is at a spa in Switzerland. I guess everyone decides that Bella's father has no right to be at his daughter's side as she fights for her life. This is just heartless and wrong, but it is just one of many wrong things in this twisted story.

    I'm not going to go into the film's ending, but almost all of the plot and what little action there is in the film is back loaded into the last few minutes of the film. The film's running time of nearly two hours is overlong. It is more like one hour of plot padded out to two hours. Surprisingly, the one character who undergoes much of a change in the film (until the last second of the film) is Jacob. While most of the characters in the film are passive and childlike, Jacob actually grows up and becomes an adult in the film. He takes a stand against the leader of his wolf pack and starts his own pack. Unfortunately, this doesn't last long. He reverts back to passivity because of something called "imprinting" and once again loses his will. Completing the image of loss of will, he even falls to his knees as if he were worshiping the baby Jesus in Bethlehem.

    I get the feeling this film is similar to "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part One." It seems to be an artificial creation, manufactured to make an additional $700 million that the studio would not have gotten if they had just made one "Breaking Dawn" film instead of two. If you are going to make movies of a series of books and you plan to make the movies true to the books, then do that. Don't try to manufacture additional movies by splitting a book in two. It doesn't work. At least it hasn't worked with the Harry Potter and Twilight franchises. This film rates a D."

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Robert Pattinson took a boat driving lesson so he would be able to drive the boat in the honeymoon scenes. Despite taking lessons, he crashed the boat in both the lessons and while filming in Brazil.
    • Goofs
      (at around 55 mins) When Bella is sitting in the car and is calling Rosalie, the phone is still in lock-mode.
    • Quotes

      Edward Cullen: No measure of time with you will be long enough. But we'll start with forever.

    • Crazy credits
      Shortly after the credits roll there is an additional scene.
    • Alternate versions
      In the UK, the film was originally shown to the resident censors, the BBFC, in an unfinished version. The BBFC advised the company that the film was likely to receive a '15' classification but that the requested '12A' certificate could be achieved by making changes to the sex scene between Edward and Bella. In particular, the BBFC suggested that more graphic sight of Edward thrusting while he lies on top of Bella, while her legs are wrapped around his torso, be removed. When the finished version of the film was submitted these changes had been made, with the scene having been reduced in length and with less focus on full body shots. As a result, the film was classified '12A'.
    • Connections
      Edited into The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1 - Extended Scenes (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Female Monster Music
      (from the Motion Picture Bride of Frankenstein (1935))

      Written and performed by Franz Waxman

      Courtesy of Universal Studios

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    • What is Part 1 of 'Breaking Dawn' about?
    • Is "Breaking Dawn - Part 1" based on a book?
    • Does 'Breaking Dawn' feature some of the graphic scenes depicted in the book?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 18, 2011 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • Portuguese
    • Also known as
      • Crepúsculo, la saga: Amanecer (parte 1)
    • Filming locations
      • Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA
    • Production companies
      • Summit Entertainment
      • Sunswept Entertainment
      • TSBD Canada Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $110,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $281,287,133
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $138,122,261
      • Nov 20, 2011
    • Gross worldwide
      • $712,205,856
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 57m(117 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
      • Dolby Surround 7.1
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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