USA Today Director Bill Condon knew that bringing Stephenie Meyer's young-adult novel Breaking Dawn to the big screen meant wading through some seriously intense themes not traditionally seen in a PG-13 film.
As he worked his way through the book to prep for shooting The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn — Part 1, which opened at midnight Thursday, he was struck by the sheer number of plot points he refers to as "delicate issues."
"I was reading it going, 'Wow, so much happens in this story,' " says Condon. "It certainly doesn't play safe. It was daunting."
Thankfully, the Oscar winner (for Gods and Monsters' screenplay) found words of inspiration for his first foray into the world of teen fiction.
"There was one very consistent idea that kept coming through," he says. "Don't water it down. There's something crazy and intense about this book, and you just have to embrace it."
Meyer's fourth and final Twilight tome has spent 163 weeks on USA TODAY's Best-Selling Books list since its 2008 release. Condon hopes the legion of "Twi-hard" fans also embraces the closing of the wildly successful film series, which has been split in two (Part 2 will be released next November).
"This was the longest book," says Condon. "I don't feel like I made two movies, I feel like I made a really long final chapter. It would have given it short shrift to cram that into one movie."
The vampire-romance movie series has proven to be a monster force at the box office, with the previous three films (2008's Twilight, 2009's New Moon and 2010's Eclipse) earning a combined $791 million. But movie fans can be fickle. Breaking Dawn — Part 1 will be a clear gauge to see if they are still feeling the passion for the love triangle between the vampire Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson), the human Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart) and the werewolf Jacob Black (Taylor Lautner).
Settling onto a couch in a sparsely decorated office on the former Warner Bros. lot, Condon, 56, insists he has not felt any waning of enthusiasm as fans dissected his every move. The attention has been so great that when a worker climbs a ladder to clean his window, Condon jokes that it's a Twi-hard peeking in on him.
Beer and brainstorming
"We spent probably half of the conversation trying to figure out exactly how to order the Domino's," Pattinson says sheepishly. "I didn't know what my own address was."
"Bill was sensitive to the fact that the entire cast has basically grown up together," says Pattinson. "He wanted to get on the same page as everyone."
"This movie really had the big scenes," says Rosenberg. "You had to get those right (or face) pain of death from the fans."
"It's always hard to play vampires who are not supposed to feel the cold," says Pattinson. "It was freezing. I was wearing a full tuxedo with heating pads on every layer."
"It was raining, there was a helicopter with paparazzi in it. It felt like it was taking the magic away," he says. "But the helicopter went away, the sun came out, and Kristen walked down the aisle. It was magical."
The true spark in the scene, according to Condon, was Stewart's reaction to seeing Pattinson at the altar.
"People always say that you put on the dress and the bride glows," says Condon. "But Kristen held back her glow until she saw Rob. And then it was like a light went on."
'Freak out' about sex scene
"When there is so much expectation for a sex scene, the actors sort of freak out," says Pattinson. "No one wants to feel like they are doing porn or something."
But Condon walked the couple through the entire process and discussed every shot in detail, smoothing out the concerns.
"Everyone was so terrified about shooting it that it sort of became kind of easy," says Pattinson. "It eventually gets to the point where you're just sort of saturated and you don't feel any expectation at all."
The resulting scenes are intense but "not graphic," he insists. Pattinson says that the close-ups on his and Stewart's faces during the love scene helped capture the emotional aspects rather than the physical. But shooting them was "strange."
"It's kind of difficult to capture that crucial expression in a full-on close-up without looking like a moron," says Pattinson."In the movie, you don't really notice the absolute, ultimate awkwardness of when we were shooting those scenes."
Another hurtle: dealing with Jacob's relationship with Bella and Edward's infant daughter, Renesmee. Black eternally bonds with the girl after her birth in a process called "imprinting." The scene required careful handling. Condon says he walked the line to clearly depict Jacob as "protective" of the child.
The scene emphasized that Jacob could envision an older version of the infant.
The movie's climax centers on Bella's near-death experience in childbirth and the attempts by her new husband to revive her by injecting his vampire venom into all parts of her body. Condon let the blood flow during the birth scene.
Author-approved scene
"Rob normally has that sense of humor where he (laughs) at everything," says Condon. "But not that day. It was like he was hooking into what it would feel like to lose Kristen."
Meyer, on hand to watch the filming, was touched. "There were people tearing up watching the scene," she says. "You could actually see him going through losing the person most dear to him."
But he was able to see Part 1 amid a crowd of more than 5,000 during its worldwide premiere Monday night, his first opportunity to get a true fan reaction. The frequent audience exclamations were a sign that the director had hit the mark. Rosenberg ran into an excited Condon as the two exited the theater.
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