9. Sam Uley wore long shorts because Chaske Spencer had an injured knee.
8. A lot of the camera cut uses in the film, particularly those surrounding the break-up scene, were very intentional so as to reflect the mood of the sequence. For instance, when Edward is breaking up with Bella, a "Dutch" angle is used on her face, and when she is alone in the woods, the camera circles down on her to reflect the world coming down on her.
7. Chris Weitz says it "killed" him when the break-up scene got out on the internet before the film made it to theaters. He wanted audiences to see it for the first time in the theater.
6. The "I love you" line by the truck was an "ADR line," and it was the actors' idea to add it in when things are going wrong rather than when they are good between the two characters.
5. Weitz states that the golden tones of this film (as opposed to the colors used in Twilight) were meant to look like a Pre-Raphaelite painting.
4. He also explains that the stance of the Cullen family in the den for the birthday scene was intentionally made to look like an eighteenth century portrait of a family in their specific, appropriate places.
3. Chris Weitz takes credit for the fact that Edward smiles after the audience screams during his entry.
2. The “Gran Dream” meadow rays were CGI-ed in and are called “God rays.”
1. Chris says he used the moon in the beginning because he figured there'd be screaming, and he did it the way he did because a lot of people at a science and film conference said it'd never been done correctly.
In the feature, a few new details about the filming process are revealed. Here are a few:
In the commentary, director Chris Weitz and editor Peter Lambert reflect upon the making of the film as it plays out on the screen.
It goes without saying that both versions include the actual film, but just to be on the safe side . . .
Standard two-disc edition features included on both editions
So that makes for at a handful of observable differences between the two DVD versions, but let’s start with the common features.
The differences are that Target’s came with a film cell from the movie which is pretty cool (mine came with a frame of Edward in the Volturi lair), and it does have the extra disc with deleted scenes and a couple of other features. WalMart’s had either a water bottle or some stickers, and it has the Eclipse sneak peek and a few other documentary-esque spotlights and discussions.
For starters, you should know that the two share features found on the standard two-disc edition but that they definitely have different offerings.
WalMart has the “Ultimate Fan Edition” and Target has the “Three-Disc Deluxe Edition,” and you guys have asked what the big differences between them are.
There are scattered variations of The Twilight Saga: New Moon on DVD available at several different vendors, but the two that most readers here have asked about are from WalMart and Target.
‘The Twilight Saga: New Moon’ DVD choices: Wal-Mart versus Target
‘The Twilight Saga: New Moon’ DVD choices: Wal-Mart versus Target « SeniStudios
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