WhiteMage212 wrote:The second one is an epic fail!
How?
The book is told in first person. The narrator (Bella) is saying she isn't sure where she was. How is that a failure of writing? If I say,
"Gee...I'm not sure where I am...am I in my room? Or was I transported somewhere else?"
would you go "HERP DERP NATE YOU SHOULD KNOW WHERE YOU ARE YOU IDIOT HOW CAN YOU NOT EVEN KNOW THAT TELL ME WHERE YOU ARE."
Of course you wouldn't. Because since I'm telling you it in first person with MY experiences and thoughts, then it's PROPER WRITING. If Twilight was written in third person, then yes, you would be correct, but it ISN'T.
Geez. I hate to defend Twilight but you know it's just sad that some of you are just bashing it because it's popular to bash it without knowing anything about the books whatsoever. I mean I haven't read them either but I at least know that when you have a first person narrator they're not always going to know everything going on, because first person is not omniscient! Gasp! This isn't a new concept!
EDIT: I was ninja'd!
Yet, at the same time no one exists in reality who is anything like Bella
I don't know that you can say no one exists who is anything like Bella. I don't know every single female on the planet after all. :p Especially since the reader is (to a degree) supposed to identify with Bella. Bella isn't a self-insert for the reader as I stated earlier (since straight men do read and enjoy Twilight too, as odd as that seems), but the fact that many girls seem to identify with her kinda says that girls like her do exist. And even if they don't, girls may start to get the idea that "I should be more like Bella!" and let's face it, Bella isn't exactly the best role model, any more than a kid who watches the Punisher should start to think they should be like him. Not that the Punisher isn't totally awesome, but he still isn't the best role model for kids to emulate.
Vampires do have a defining philosophy. It is just much vaguer than you think and does not include sparkling.
I don't recall a "vampires can never sparkle" in the defining philosophy. I wonder if people in the early 1900s or whatever said the same things you did when new vampire traits were added. "The original defining philosophy never said that vampires can't cross running water! You can't just ADD IN something like not being able to cross a river, it was never part of the philosophy!" Since Bram Stoker completely invented the "not crossing running water" thing, it was never part of European folklore about vampires.
So unless you want to say Bram Stoker's vampires aren't real vampires, you can't say sparkling vampires aren't real vampires.
you have a creature that is a BA predator, usually drinks blood, and is almost always evil
You seem to have made up the BA predator thing. Not all vampires are like that. The Discworld novels certainly don't portray vampires like that (though again, Discworld is comedy/satire, but it still proves that not all vampires fit that description). Edward does drink blood, though, which to me seems to be the only real defining consistent trait of vampires. Bunnicula is different because he sucked vegetable juice, but come on, he's a rabbit. It goes with the theme.
Just don't say that vampires can arbitrarily be anything
I'm not saying they can arbitrarily be anything. I'm just saying there's nothing you can do to show the vampires from Twilight aren't vampires, because the traits of vampires have always changed historically except for their tendency to drink blood.
Question: Is the Count from Sesame Street a vampire? Yes or no? He doesn't seem to be a BA predator and he doesn't seem to drink blood either, and he certainly isn't evil. So is the Count a vampire? What about Count Chocula?
In fact...looking at TV Tropes "Our Vampires Are Different" page, what about the vampires in Blood+? Are they not vampires? Lots of good examples there.
I said that vampires sparkling is counter to the entire idea of vampirism that has been established and upheld throughout the past hundred years or more of literature.
You have yet to provide proof of this, for all the times you keep repeating it. You have given YOUR opinions on what vampires are, and maybe they are not vampires TO YOU, but that doesn't make them not vampires, any more than my opinion on Alucard in Hellsing makes him not a vampire. He may not be a vampire TO ME but he is still a vampire, would you not agree? All you can say is "Well, history!" Except history has changed many of the traits commonly associated with vampires. When was the last time you saw a vampire acting OCD? That was one of their original traits y'know. Did you know unnatural strength and speed were NOT part of the original vampire lore? Pretty crazy that it seems to be used commonly these days.
God-like or not, he has all the philosophical tics of a vampire and stands among the vampires of old without standing out. Some of the details are different, but he doesn't frolic in the grass while his skin sparkles in the sun.
He doesn't stand out against the vampires of old? Right, because not being able to be killed by a stake through the heart totally doesn't make him stand out, nope, every vampire was immune to stakes. And crosses. And garlic. And all vampires had insane magical powers that made them like gods. And none of them were affected by sunlight at all. See, if Dracula had stepped into sunlight he would've just said "Man I sure do need some sunglasses!"
"Doesn't stand out." Ha. Does he even drink blood? That's an honest question, actually. I haven't really read Hellsing, so I don't know if he does or not.
I would like to also take this time to thank the internet for giving us the chance to seriously enter into protracted debates over life, love, and the meaning of vampires.
Vampires are serious business. If we don't argue over the traits of fictional characters, the world may very well collapse.