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Wednesday, November 19, 2008

We’ve seen “Twilight.” Here’s the scoop!

Stephenie Meyer’s swoony saga of vampires and young love — a Gothic romance for the age of Google — has grown from OMG word-of-mouth phenomenon among teen girls to mass popularity among teens, and increasingly their mothers and teachers.

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The movie, which opens Friday, has been anticipated by fans — the so-called Twi-hards — who have been eager to see their beloved characters come to life, but fearful that Hollywood would somehow screw it up.

Tuesday night, at the only Atlanta screening before the opening, a packed house shrieked en masse and nearly levitated in unison when the movie began. As millions more pour into theaters this weekend, here’s what they will be talking about.

Edward Cullen. And his hair. Cullen is the beautiful, noble, darned-near-perfect vampire who falls hard for young Bella, a 17-year-old mortal. Heartthrob Robert Pattinson (Cedric Diggory in the Harry Potter movies) plays him as soft and afraid of his own urges at first, then increasingly stronger. His magnificently teased, poufed and highlighted hairstyle — James Dean taken to extremes — has so much talk already there’s even a Facebook group just for Pattinson’s hair.

Bella. Publicity shots of actress Kristen Stewart made her look too glam, and an earlier (discarded) script turned her into an action heroine. So fans were worried the movie might ruin Bella, whose awkwardness, introspection and sheer normalcy is a big factor in the story’s appeal. But the movie Bella is very close to the book Bella, even nibbling her nails in one scene. Pretty, but no supermodel.

Following the novel. The movie sticks pretty close to the book, both in letter and in spirit. Fan-fave dialogue like “You’re like my own personal brand of heroin” survives intact.

The atmosphere. Gloomy and gloomier — this is the Pacific Northwest. Is that a whiff of “Twin Peaks” blowing on the breeze? Still, it helps anchor “Twilight” in a reasonably believable locale.

A quick cameo. Blink and you’ll miss her, but in a scene with Bella and her dad in a diner a little over halfway through the movie, that’s author Meyer sitting at the counter, pulling a Hitchcock.

I’m not allowed to review the movie — the deal with getting to see the screening — but those are the highlights and you can read between the lines.

So who’s going to see “Twilight” this weekend? Are you concerned or just excited?

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