Twilight, pp. 53-57
I  threw down a quick bowl of cereal and some orange juice from the  carton. I felt excited to go to school, and that scared me. I knew it  wasn't the stimulating learning environment I was anticipating, or  seeing my new set of friends. If I was being honest with myself, I knew I  was eager to get to school because I would see Edward Cullen. And that  was very, very stupid.
You know, as I go through this book  a second time, I hate it a lot more. With the tide of badness washing  over you, it's easy to miss the little things. Take this paragraph here.
First,  I had no idea the phrase 'throw down' referred to eating. I know its  literal meaning, and I know it's a seldom-used euphemism for fighting,  but I didn't know people referred to eating food quickly as 'throwing  down'. I got a good laugh, though, by my literal reading of the phrase. I  pictured Bella, in a chipper mood for the first time in the story,  cheerfully making a bowl of cereal and then throwing it on the floor.  Then, rather than throwing the carton of orange juice down after it, she  pours some juice into her hand and throws that  on the floor. Go ahead, picture it. Might as well get some amusement  out of this thing. (No, I didn't picture her fighting with her cereal,  but that would've been awesome.)
Notice  how, yet again, Bella utterly dismisses people she calls friends, who  have been nothing but considerate and friendly despite her generally  gloomy demeanour and cutting remarks. Maybe this is an accurate  portrayal of an average teenager (though I remember liking  my friends, and even wanting to see them on occasion), but it comes off  as a kind of psychosis. Edward is the only thing that matters, and  every other contact is all but shut out. Whenever she's not talking to  Edward, she's thinking about Edward, even when other people are talking  to her. I don't know how she continues to pass her classes, since she  treats schoolwork the same way she treats her friends (as distractions  from Edward). In fact, this is yet another point at which I can see an  interesting direction the novel might have taken. (Go ahead, try it  yourself.) What if Bella, the socially inexperienced girl with excellent  marks, falls so hard for Edward that her grades start to slip,  jeopardising her future?
But no, that would introduce some  conflict into the story, since Edward would then not be perfect for  Bella. It really is a mark of how much vampires have been neutered in  contemporary culture. Edward can lust for human blood, but he can't  cause Bella to get a B in chemistry!
I'm beginning to suspect  Charlie is a very private man and is also constantly  busy so that Meyer  doesn't have to portray Bella shutting him out as she  does her  friends. Throughout the book (and, I'm given to understand, in future  stories as well), Charlie comes off as the most sympathetic character.  We see another example of this here:
Charlie had gotten up who knows how early to put snow chains on my truck.
Chief Swan comes off as a decent, loving father, and Bella remains self-centred, deceitful, and ungrateful.
We  also see also another instance of Bella's maddening contradictory  traits. She breezes through all her classes, an advanced prep,  straight-A student, but she is 'scared' because she is 'excited about  going to school'.
And I was suspicious of [Edward]; why should he lie about his eyes?
Bella  here is referring to Edward's evasiveness about his eyes changing  colour--to what end, I've no idea--but I still find it amusing that his  lie about not having a chance to introduce himself gets a pass. Then  there's this gem:
...Mike's puppy dog behaviour  and Eric's apparent rivalry with him were disconcerting. I wasn't sure  if I didn't prefer being ignored.
So when Mike  sat next to Bella and escorted her to her next class while Eric looked  on with jealousy, 'that was flattering', but now the exact same  behaviour is 'disconcerting'. What's happened here?
Well you see,  Oh My Brothers, now Bella has Edward, who is higher up in the food  chain. So now the other two boys' desire for Bella and their rivalry  with each other is meaningless, and hence their antics now annoy Bella.
Now we get another moment that made me laugh out loud the first time I saw the Twilight film. But first, the set-up.
Edward  Cullen was standing four cars down from me, staring at me in horror.  His face stood out from a sea of faces, all frozen in the same mask of  shock. But of more immediate importance was the dark blue van that was  skidding, tires locked and squealing against the brakes, spinning wildly  across the ice of the parking lot. It was going to hit the back corner  of my truck, and I was standing between them. I didn't even have time to  close my eyes.
But a lot of other people had time to hear  the sound of the brakes, turn to look, recognise what is happening, and  assume shocked expressions. Unless 'a sea of' people were already all  looking at Bella. And surely that wouldn't be the case.
Just  before I heard the shattering crunch of the van folding around the  truck bed, something hit me, hard, but not from the direction I was  expecting. My head cracked against the icy blacktop, and I felt  something solid and cold pinning me to the ground.
I hope  you see the romance in 'Edward violently shoves Bella into hard  surfaces', because this won't be the last time we'll see it.
I  was lying on the pavement behind the tan car I'd parked next to. But I  didn't have a chance to notice anything else, because the van was still  coming. It had curled gratingly around the end of the truck and, still  spinning and sliding, was about to collide with me again.
A  low oath made me aware that someone was with me, and the voice was  impossible not to recognise. Two long, white hands shot out protectively  in front of me, and the van shuddered to a stop a foot from my face,  the large hands fitting providentially into a deep dent in the side of  the van's body.
Wow, two unnecessary adverbs in the same  sentence! Meyer has outdone herself. (Plus, 'providentially' is used  incorrectly, given what Bella says about the dents [sic]  later.) Bella is fine, of course, and there are some words exchanged to  this effect, during which Edward speaks in a 'low, frantic voice' and  assumes a 'concerned, innocent expression'. Some vampire. When Father  Callahan lamented the world no longer had Evil for him to confront, just  evil, the vampire Barlow showed him the error of his thinking in 'Salem's Lot's most powerful scene. ('Come, false priest.  Learn of a true religion. Take my  communion!')* One gets the feeling Callahan's faith would be more than  adequate to send Edward fleeing back to his coffin--err, crypt--err,  stately Cullen manor just outside of town.
Then we get the novel's version of one of my favourite moments in the Twilight film:
'How in the...' I trailed off, trying to clear my head, get my bearings. 'How did you get over here so fast?'
'I was standing right next to you, Bella,' he said, his tone serious again.
I'm not sure exactly why I find this exchange so hilarious, but I do. After Edward stops a speeding van with his bare hands, Bella demands to know...how he reached her so quickly. I can't tell you how hard I laughed once I realised she was never going to bring up his superhuman strength and durability,  not to Edward or to anyone else. She will pursue him relentlessly about  how he got from where she saw him standing to where she was, but she  never thinks to herself that it's a wee bit strange that he was able to  stop an out-of-control vehicle barrelling towards him just by pushing on  it. No, the reason her puzzler hurts is that he seemed to be standing  far away. He mentions that she has a concussion and that's why she  doesn't realise where he was (frankly, not a bad explanation), but she's  convinced.
To be fair, the novel does have Bella bring up his  leaving hand-prints in the side of the van from pushing it to a stop,  but only later, in the hospital, and after she's harped on the 'how were  you there so fast?' bit.
I'm  sorry, but I'd sooner demand an explanation of 'you stopped a speeding  van with your bare hands' than 'I thought you were standing over there'.**
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*We'll just ignore Callahan's appearance in the later Dark Tower books. Should be easy to do, since after reading the later Dark Tower books, I slammed my head into the desk until I dislodged all memory of them.
**Good thing nobody notices the van has two hand-shaped dents in it, eh?
You made me laugh at reading this one. Being southern I had heard that saying about eating. But I can understand others might be confused. The cops must not be good in their town either since they missed the hand prints as well. I would never watch the movie but I'm having a blast reading this.
ReplyDeleteHand prints. Ugh. Such observant people. I'd believe it in my inner city neighborhood before I'd believe it in a small town. People notice EVERYTHING in small towns where they know everyone.
ReplyDeleteI would watch the movie, Riff Trax is your friend.
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