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Comments 26

gehayi November 28 2012, 07:08:10 UTC
I think that Charlie just gave up. His daughter has been a whiny, co-dependent, sociopathic fiend with a death wish for four movies and he has to know that she's lying through her teeth about everything. So I think that he just says, "Fuck it. There's nothing I can do. She clearly does not want me in her life." And the ticket out of town just reinforces that ( ... )

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zelda_queen November 30 2012, 01:59:42 UTC
I think so too. I wanted to slap Bella so badly, during that scene where she's all "Just understand that I can't tell you about this. Or my mysterious niece-in-law/adopted daughter." God.

I actually wish that in some Meyer-free continuity, Charlie WOULD be a good grandfather to Renesmee. If Meyer hadn't made her such a brat, I'd pity that child immensely. It's obvious her parents don't give a damn about her, and she's got Jacob hovering over her 24/7. I know Mervin's portrayal of her in The Wedding Crashers is almost certainly how she'd be in canon, but I cling to the delusion that with a few decent people to influence her, she has a chance to grow up into a better person.

I'm sure the cop-out was at Meyer's insistence, yeah. Going off of her FAQ, she thought the anticlimax was a fine twist ending. They probably had to twist her arm to get her to agree to as much that happened as it did.

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gehayi November 30 2012, 02:55:12 UTC
I cling to the delusion that with a few decent people to influence her, she has a chance to grow up into a better person.

Yeah, that would be great. God knows Renesmee isn't to blame for her freakish biology--or for the insane obsession of a pedophiliac werewolf. I want Renesmee and Claire to grow up and fall in love, say "Fuck y'all" to the vampires and werewolves (except for Leah, of course, because Leah is all the awesome), and then go off and build a very human life for themselves somewhere that actually including making the world a better and happier place. Oh, and Renesmee drops her clunky first name and renames herself by changing one letter in her middle name--going from Carlie to Charlie, which just makes her grandfather BEAM when she tells him.

Bella, of course, regards her daughter as a miserable failure and is deeply, deeply ashamed of her.

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zelda_queen December 5 2012, 01:48:09 UTC
Sounds like a few fanfics I've read, one of which was all about the multiple times Renesmee went to college and had nice, normal boyfriends and hobbies and did fun things. She also spent every summer visiting Charlie, and went fishing with him.

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carakasla November 28 2012, 10:10:16 UTC
Can I repeat, YET AGAIN, about Washington and the Pacific Northwest...

WE. DO NOT. GET SNOW. LIKE EVERYONE. FUCKING. ELSE. NO SNOW. UNTIL JANUARY. The snow is like SLUSH. It's not solid awesome like back east. IT'S WET, SLUSHIE, AND IT FUCKING SUCKS. NOTHING 'SETTLES'. I FUCKING HATE THOSE TWO WHOLE WEEKS IN JANUARY. TRUST ME. I GOD DAMN FUCKING LIVE HERE.

ARE WE FUCKING CLEAR NOW? ANY QUESTIONS?

More sense if she said 'When the wind starts blowing' because WE GET WINDSTORMS.

GOD FUCKING DAMN IT. OUR WEATHER ISN'T THAT FUCKING HARD.

Also, does no one remember the shitload of VOLCANOS in Washingon State? No? Cool. What about the fact that we are all waiting for the BIG EARTHQUAKE? The one that is suppose to rival that one that happened in Japan in 2011? No? Nothing? Awesome.

Question: Since it's obvious Meyer had creative control, doesn't it make it MORE obvious that Leah's....incident....was just another jab from Meyer because Leah is a favorite for the Anti's? That is what I got.

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gehayi November 28 2012, 16:09:19 UTC
I remember Mount St. Helen's, at least. I didn't know that there were many volcanoes in Washington--or that everyone is waiting for a big earthquake. (Though I suppose it's logical, since everyone's heard of California's problems in that area and Washington isn't THAT far away.)

Also, you can HAVE the snow that we get back East. I'll take quickly melting slush any day of the week.

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angel_renoir November 28 2012, 19:52:37 UTC
I do actually want the nice fluffy snow, though. I like snow. I like making snowmen.

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angel_renoir November 28 2012, 19:49:04 UTC
Oh, are you serious? What are you talking about? Yes, we DO have non-slush snow here in Washington state. It may have been freak weather and not common occurrence, but it's not impossible! Come on, now. Where in Washington DO you live?

We had snow some two years ago in October/November. I went sledding in the park and made snow mountains in my front yard, so it sure as heck not slush.

We had another one last year. Around the same time. November or December, I'm not sure. It's also the same snow as the previous year. Powdery, but went pretty solid the next day. My friends went and made a giant snowball in the park.

And have you forgotten then heavy snow of 2008, the worst snowstorm to ever hit the Pacific Northwest in A DECADE?? Snow was so thick that people were stuck at home for days. My neighbour made a giant snowman TALLER THAN THEIR HOUSE and it stayed there until well past Christmas.

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often_partisan November 28 2012, 23:04:10 UTC
RE Russian vs Romanian

Stephenie is obviously unaware that:

Romanian is a Romance language, Russian is a Slavic language. They are not even in the same family of languages, let alone interchangable.

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zelda_queen November 30 2012, 02:06:15 UTC
I'm betting Meyer heard of Vlad the Impaler and thought "Vladimir" was somehow a variant of "Vlad".

The Lusty Wench has yet to see Mervin's readings of the Illustrated Guide, so she didn't know how much name fail was in the series. The "Vladimir = Romanian not Russian" thing really confused her. I had to assure her several times throughout the movie that no, Vladimir wasn't a Russian vampire with a badly-done accent, he was a Romanian vampire with a stupid name.

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angel_renoir November 30 2012, 02:29:56 UTC
Wait, I don't quite get what the problem with this is. So Vladimir is a Russian name?

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zelda_queen November 30 2012, 03:34:23 UTC
From what I understand, "Vladimir" is the form of the name from Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus. The Romanian version would just be "Vlad".

There was some other name fail that Mervin discussed, mainly to do with the fact that the "Romanian" vampires were actually from before Romania was around. If I recall correctly, the Illustrated Guide said they were from Dacia. I think Mervin said that one of the two's names weren't around in the days of Dacia. At the very least, both names seemed to have come from Christian origins and, from what I gather, Christianity wasn't too big in Dacia. And given Meyer's word that vampires can't change their viewpoints after being transformed...yeah. The fact that they consider themselves Romanian instead of Dacian to begin with is stupid.

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angel_renoir November 29 2012, 06:31:19 UTC
Funny you should mention Avatar. I think the producers are AWARE of that, because the guy who plays Benjamin had a role in Avatar: Legend of Korra. In case you didn't follow Korra, the guy was voice actor for Tahno, who was a waterbender. I'm pretty sure the fact that Benjamin's grand entrance had him "bending" the pool's water to block the door is no coincidence.

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lady_fofa November 30 2012, 01:38:33 UTC
Ah yes, that. That made my sister laugh, especially when I mentioned that the person who turned Benjamin was named Amun (she really laughed at that one).

Or when I read Benjamin's bit in the Illustrated Guide, after learning the order Benjamin learned the elements she was like "AAAAAAAAAAA (beat) Could you repeat that?" and she was relieved to learn he didn't learn the elements in the Avatar order.

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angel_renoir November 30 2012, 02:28:15 UTC
Amun. Heh. Yeah. True. Someone should write a Twilight crossover with Korra.

I haven't read the illustrated guide yet, but I wouldn't care even if he did. I'm not that big of an Avatar freak.

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zelda_queen November 30 2012, 02:09:45 UTC
Oh dear lord. >__< They probably did. He was waterbending, yes, though mostly for amusement/to impress the Cullens.

Of course, that just makes it even stupider. I'd bet ten bucks that a single Bender could take down all the Volturi, let alone the Avatar. Just makes it all the more obvious that Benjamin was overpowered and if he had a brain in his head, he could have used his powers in creative ways to take them down singlehandedly. Like setting them on fire. Doy.

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aikaterini December 2 2012, 17:21:31 UTC
The filmmakers probably realized how pointless the Volturi’s wives were and thus wisely left them out.

Regarding the ethnic stereotypes, it’s also more acceptable in “Hetalia” because the entire premise of the series is spoofing world history. It’s supposed to be a parody, so you’re not supposed to take it seriously.

(However, there are people who dislike Hetalia precisely because it contains stereotypes and presents a humorous spin on history - they think that it cheapens and reduces the gravity of terrible historical events like WWII. Oftentimes, many of APH’s critics will rhetorically ask, “What if they portrayed the Holocaust in the same way that they portray the rest of WWII?” So, there is that viewpoint to consider as well.)

Benjamin’s stupidity can really be chalked up to Meyer, since she was the one who gave him power of all of the elements and yet never thought to have him use fire. However, the filmmakers could have changed that, just like they changed other aspects of the book, so they are partly to blame.

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zelda_queen December 19 2012, 04:10:02 UTC
"Regarding the ethnic stereotypes, it’s also more acceptable in 'Hetalia' because the entire premise of the series is spoofing world history. It’s supposed to be a parody, so you’re not supposed to take it seriously ( ... )

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