Poll: Twilight honored among "Exorcist" and "The Shining" at Academy Awards

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Quiet Stranger

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BonsaiK said:
Cliff_m85 said:
BonsaiK said:
Cliff_m85 said:
You heard me, "Twilight" was honored in a horror movie montage that included such films as "Jaws", "Silence of the Lambs", "Friday the Thirteenth", "The Shining", "The Exorcist", and "Rosemary's Baby" among others.

As another personal slap in the face of horror movie fans, the tribute to horror films was actually presented on stage by the two stars of the second Twilight film.

Your thoughts?
Well it clearly horrified you enough to make this thread, right?
Not the film, but the ooze in the brains of the film maker that made the montage.
I don't see what the big deal is. It's just a movie. Some people like it, some don't. So what? Most horror movies are frankly crap anyway, there's only a tiny handful of genuinely good ones.
The big deal is Twilight doesn't come close to being a horror movie, it's some romance tween fucking bull shit movie that someone just stuck vampires in to make it sell more
 

tkioz

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May 7, 2009
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... it's not horror... well... actually it is in that it horrifies me that people actually read and watch that shit.
 

Burningsok

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Wakizashi74 said:
The acting was horrid. The screenplay and directing was horrid. The dialogue was horrid. Everything about it was horrid. And yes, I saw New Moon, so these are my educated opinions. Just because everything is horrid doesn't classify the movie as "Horror."
I feel ya Dylan... I agree :)
 

BonsaiK

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crimson5pheonix said:
And how do you get horror~romance?
WARNING: this post will scare you.

Horror, and vampires in particular have always been about romance. Dracula was always portrayed as a charismatic, well-spoken man, he didn't force people into his castle, he lured and charmed them in. He even killed his victims in an embrace that looks and feels exactly like a bit of passionate necking until you feel the fangs sink in and then it's too late. If you want to see the inspiration for Twilight's vampires, look to the source. Twilight's vision of what a vampire is, is actually a lot closer in spirit to Bram Stoker's book than almost every other recent vampire film made, most of which take amazingly brazen liberties with the "vampire" formula (space vampires, zombie vampires, vampire werewolves, etc). A bitter pill for people here to swallow, no doubt, but Twilight succeeded while so many other vampire films disappeared into the land of 'meh' because Twilight actually mostly got vampires right.

Grief counselling is available via PM for distraught horror fans (as this thread will be locked soon no doubt).
 

crimson5pheonix

It took 6 months to read my title.
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BonsaiK said:
crimson5pheonix said:
And how do you get horror~romance?
WARNING: this post will scare you.

Horror, and vampires in particular have always been about romance. Dracula was always portrayed as a charismatic, well-spoken man, he didn't force people into his castle, he lured and charmed them in. He even killed his victims in an embrace that looks and feels exactly like a bit of passionate necking until you feel the fangs sink in and then it's too late. If you want to see the inspiration for Twilight's vampires, look to the source. Twilight's vision of what a vampire is, is actually a lot closer in spirit to Bram Stoker's book than almost every other recent vampire film made, most of which take amazingly brazen liberties with the "vampire" formula (space vampires, zombie vampires, vampire werewolves, etc). A bitter pill for people here to swallow, no doubt, but Twilight succeeded while so many other vampire films disappeared into the land of 'meh' because Twilight actually mostly got vampires right[/i].

Grief counselling is available via PM for distraught horror fans (as this thread will be locked soon no doubt).


Well, maybe vampires for horror~romance, but not horror in general. How would you get romance out of an actual horror based werewolf movie?

Also, I thought the main vampire in Twilight didn't want to bite the main character, wouldn't that kind of mess things up? Or am I just wrong and he's toying with her?
 

Christemo

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LordNue said:
I don't watch awards, I'm glad now. Hearing that is utterly retarded, there is nothing 'horror' about twilight in any way.
theres horror in the terrible actors. and everything else about the movie.
 

BonsaiK

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Nov 14, 2007
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crimson5pheonix said:
BonsaiK said:
crimson5pheonix said:
And how do you get horror~romance?
WARNING: this post will scare you.

Horror, and vampires in particular have always been about romance. Dracula was always portrayed as a charismatic, well-spoken man, he didn't force people into his castle, he lured and charmed them in. He even killed his victims in an embrace that looks and feels exactly like a bit of passionate necking until you feel the fangs sink in and then it's too late. If you want to see the inspiration for Twilight's vampires, look to the source. Twilight's vision of what a vampire is, is actually a lot closer in spirit to Bram Stoker's book than almost every other recent vampire film made, most of which take amazingly brazen liberties with the "vampire" formula (space vampires, zombie vampires, vampire werewolves, etc). A bitter pill for people here to swallow, no doubt, but Twilight succeeded while so many other vampire films disappeared into the land of 'meh' because Twilight actually mostly got vampires right.

Grief counselling is available via PM for distraught horror fans (as this thread will be locked soon no doubt).
Well, maybe vampires for horror~romance, but not horror in general. How would you get romance out of an actual horror based werewolf movie?

Also, I thought the main vampire in Twilight didn't want to bight the main character, wouldn't that kind of mess things up? Or am I just wrong and he's toying with her?
Well, is that not where the appeal lies? The man is willing to (attempt to) exercise control of his natural urges for the sake of her? This type of moral quandary also appears in Bram Stoker's book and several early vampire film incarnations and gave those early protagonists a bit of extra depth and broader appeal. The early vampires were typically very tormented creatures, who were aware that they were sowing the seeds of their own destruction, but also knew they were powerless to permanently stop their true nature - only delay or repress it.

A werewolf is a man when he's not a wolf. In traditional werewolf literature, the werewolf only is in werewolf form during the full moon. Usually, once again, the werewolf in film "as man" is a romantic person with a love interest, who then has the torment of trying to hide his true nature and explain his awkward monthly absences to the girl he cares about. A constant battle between primal instinct and romantic ideals, once again, not unlike Twilight.
 

Sir Kemper

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Whaaaaaaat?

I mean, no thats were i draw the line. Twilight is NOT a horror movie, unless it's some sick joke implying that the movie is so bad it's scary...no...no..i'm sorry..i can't accept this.
 

crimson5pheonix

It took 6 months to read my title.
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BonsaiK said:
crimson5pheonix said:
BonsaiK said:
crimson5pheonix said:
And how do you get horror~romance?
WARNING: this post will scare you.

Horror, and vampires in particular have always been about romance. Dracula was always portrayed as a charismatic, well-spoken man, he didn't force people into his castle, he lured and charmed them in. He even killed his victims in an embrace that looks and feels exactly like a bit of passionate necking until you feel the fangs sink in and then it's too late. If you want to see the inspiration for Twilight's vampires, look to the source. Twilight's vision of what a vampire is, is actually a lot closer in spirit to Bram Stoker's book than almost every other recent vampire film made, most of which take amazingly brazen liberties with the "vampire" formula (space vampires, zombie vampires, vampire werewolves, etc). A bitter pill for people here to swallow, no doubt, but Twilight succeeded while so many other vampire films disappeared into the land of 'meh' because Twilight actually mostly got vampires right[/i].

Grief counselling is available via PM for distraught horror fans (as this thread will be locked soon no doubt).


Well, maybe vampires for horror~romance, but not horror in general. How would you get romance out of an actual horror based werewolf movie?

Also, I thought the main vampire in Twilight didn't want to bight the main character, wouldn't that kind of mess things up? Or am I just wrong and he's toying with her?


Well, is that not where the appeal lies? The man is willing to (attempt to) exercise control the natural urges for the sake of her? This type of moral quandary also appears in Bram Stoker's book and several early vampire film incarnations and gave those early protagonists a bit of extra depth.

A werewolf is a man when he's not a wolf. In traditional werewolf literature, the werewolf only become a wolf during the full moon. Usually, once again, the werewolf in film "as man" is a romantic person with a love interest, who then has the torment of trying to hide his true nature and explain his awkward monthly absences to the girl he cares about. A constant battle between primal instinct and romantic ideals, once again, not unlike Twilight.


When did Dracula not want to feed? He only exercised control because it is socially uncouth to jump out and yell "Bleagh!" and start sucking.

As for the Werewolf one, then it becomes a romance movie instead of horror because the focus has shifted to love instead of constant stalking.
 

LiquidXlr8

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BonsaiK said:
crimson5pheonix said:
And how do you get horror~romance?
WARNING: this post will scare you.

Horror, and vampires in particular have always been about romance. Dracula was always portrayed as a charismatic, well-spoken man, he didn't force people into his castle, he lured and charmed them in. He even killed his victims in an embrace that looks and feels exactly like a bit of passionate necking until you feel the fangs sink in and then it's too late. If you want to see the inspiration for Twilight's vampires, look to the source. Twilight's vision of what a vampire is, is actually a lot closer in spirit to Bram Stoker's book than almost every other recent vampire film made, most of which take amazingly brazen liberties with the "vampire" formula (space vampires, zombie vampires, vampire werewolves, etc). A bitter pill for people here to swallow, no doubt, but Twilight succeeded while so many other vampire films disappeared into the land of 'meh' because Twilight actually mostly got vampires right.

Grief counselling is available via PM for distraught horror fans (as this thread will be locked soon no doubt).
Lol, I was in the process of looking up links to source a paragraph just like this when I hit refresh. The vampire "trope" as we know it today is usually attributed to Stoker's "Dracula". However, Stoker was heavily influenced by Rymer's penny-dreadful series "Varney the Vampire" (no, i am not joking, that is his real name.) that came before by at least 50 years. In both we see the titular vampire in the sunlight, and in the case of Varney he "seemed to give off an unearthly aura, both appealing and repulsive." Sound familiar? (prob. not to most of you, because you couldn't be bothered to actually read the books, just jump on the nearest bandwagon; which happened to be hating Twilight)
 

ZydrateDealer

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Nov 17, 2009
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Oh yes I've always found shiny pricks with an aversion to having sex with a eager women terrifying...but then I am so tragically homophobic...not really but the point I'm trying to make is that NO twilight is not a horror film it's a romance!
 

BonsaiK

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Nov 14, 2007
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LiquidXlr8 said:
BonsaiK said:
crimson5pheonix said:
And how do you get horror~romance?
WARNING: this post will scare you.

Horror, and vampires in particular have always been about romance. Dracula was always portrayed as a charismatic, well-spoken man, he didn't force people into his castle, he lured and charmed them in. He even killed his victims in an embrace that looks and feels exactly like a bit of passionate necking until you feel the fangs sink in and then it's too late. If you want to see the inspiration for Twilight's vampires, look to the source. Twilight's vision of what a vampire is, is actually a lot closer in spirit to Bram Stoker's book than almost every other recent vampire film made, most of which take amazingly brazen liberties with the "vampire" formula (space vampires, zombie vampires, vampire werewolves, etc). A bitter pill for people here to swallow, no doubt, but Twilight succeeded while so many other vampire films disappeared into the land of 'meh' because Twilight actually mostly got vampires right.

Grief counselling is available via PM for distraught horror fans (as this thread will be locked soon no doubt).
Lol, I was in the process of looking up links to source a paragraph just like this when I hit refresh. The vampire "trope" as we know it today is usually attributed to Stoker's "Dracula". However, Stoker was heavily influenced by Rymer's penny-dreadful series "Varney the Vampire" (no, i am not joking, that is his real name.) that came before by at least 50 years. In both we see the titular vampire in the sunlight, and in the case of Varney he "seemed to give off an unearthly aura, both appealing and repulsive." Sound familiar? (prob. not to most of you, because you couldn't be bothered to actually read the books, just jump on the nearest bandwagon; which happened to be hating Twilight)
Cookie for you. You see folks, Twilight isn't the trend you should be up in arms about. Blindly hating Twilight is the trend that is the real problem here. Twilight is popular for more reasons than just the obvious.
 

RJ Dalton

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Aug 13, 2009
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Vampires and werewolves do not a horror film make. I haven't put any faith in the Oscars for years. The way they go about judging things is pure opinion. They have no standards of judgment, so it all comes down to who likes what.
 

brodie21

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Apr 6, 2009
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monkeypants said:
its so bad its scary?
YES! just what i was thinking. it just goes to show that whoever runs the oscars was trying really hard to attract lots of ratings from the teenage girl fanbase
 

Frank_Sinatra_

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Dec 30, 2008
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Aby_Z said:
I think I get it now... Twilight is the biggest troll since Kanye... It explains everything!
I think she found a way to be a world wide troll and not get banned from... Everything!
:eek:
 

Therumancer

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Nov 28, 2007
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Actually I think the whole modern vampire thing has become overdone. It was cool when it started with things like "Lost Boys" and "Anita Blake" (to a lesser extent), but Twilight is part of a sub-genere evolution that I feel is going too far.

That said, I will say that I can actually see the Academy's point here. Like it or not, "Twilight" has gotten a lot of attention for the genere, even if it isn't critical attention. People who are watching horror movies now as teens who will probably move on to other stuff later.

While I actually think "Harry Potter" is pretty good overall, I admit that it's not great literature overall. I think it does deserve it's recogntion though (the knighting of JK Rowling for example) because it has gotten kids to read who otherwise probably never would have cracked a book. A similar point to Twilight.

Even the most "toxic" creation can have a positive effect, and when that effect is big enough it deserves some kind of recognition.
 

Canadamus Prime

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Jun 17, 2009
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tthor said:
canadamus_prime said:
I told you all the Oscars were bullshit, but did you listen? Noooooooooo!

As for Twilight, I haven't seen or read it, except for a few trailers; but it sure as hell didn't strike me as a horror film. More like an episode of 90210 with, what was supposed to be a vampire, but didn't quite pull it off.
my god, we should have listened sooner...
Yes you should've, 'cause then maybe you wouldn't have bothered watching them and wouldn't have had to have seen that disgraceful montage.
 

LockeDown

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I can only hope that this Twilight fad dies out sometime within the next few years. It's an offense to those of us who actually used to enjoy vampire movies to see little kids running around calling Twilight a "vampire movie", let alone a "good vampire movie".
 

Snotnarok

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Twilight is one of those great movies up there with Veggietales and Bananas in Pajamas. Depicting something we all know but as something that walks around as something else.