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Vampire Academy Tamil Pdf Download

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Vampire Academy Tamil Pdf Download


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DOWNLOAD: http://urllio.com/qybaw


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Seventeen year old Rose Hathaway is reckless, passionate, outspoken and beautiful. She is also a dhampir (half vampire/half human) training to become a Guardian, an essential part of her world needed for the survival of her race. She, along with others study at St. Vladimir's Academy in Montana where they coexist with Moroi (mortal vampires who can manipulate the element -air, earth, fire, water) until they graduate to protect the Royal Families from the evil, nocturnal, immortal Strigoi vampires who kill humans and Moroi alike. The war is never-ending and it has been a battle of survival for centuries. But will Rose be able to prove herself through discipline when she herself is falling for her 24 year old mentor, Dimitri Belikov after returning to school with Princess Lissa Dragomir, a Royal Moroi and Rose's best friend after an infamous two year furlough that endangered their lives? Rose Hathaway is a dhampir, half-vampire and half-human, who is training to be a guardian at St Vladimir's Academy along with many others like her. There are good and bad vampires in their world: Moroi, who co-exist peacefully among the humans and only take blood from donors, and also possess the ability to control one of the four elements - water, earth, fire or air; and Strigoi, blood-sucking, evil vampires who drink to kill. Rose and other dhampir guardians are trained to protect Moroi and kill Strigoi throughout their education. Along with her best friend, Princess Vasilisa Dragomir, a Moroi and the last of her line, with whom she has a nigh unbreakable bond, Rose must run away from St Vladimir's, in order to protect Lissa from those who wish to harm the princess and use her for their own means. I've been a fan of the book series since it was first published. Critics aren't too impressed with the movie version but I think its time they heard what the fans have to say. It was good. It was beyond good; it was FANTASTIC. Book readers are often the harshest critics amongst fans; worries about whether scenes will be cut or whether the actors fit the characters they're supposed to play. But I'm glad to say, going to watch the movie with an open mind and faith in Richelle Mead & the crew, I was impressed. Is it ever going to win an Oscar? No. But then, what teenage-centric movie has? Harry Potter was one of my favourite movies and as epic as it was it wasn't even considered for the Oscars. So it isn't fair to put VA down just because it will never make it into the Oscars.

I actually liked the changes made in the movie. The script writer and director made excellent choices that clearly conveyed what was going on that would have been difficult to be shown in the movie. Considering that the crew of VA were dealing with adapting hundreds of pages into a movie that ran under 2 hours, they did an excellent job. I particularly liked the fight scene that occurred just as soon the guardians took Rose and Lissa back to the academy. Now that never happened in the book but I loved it. It was fast and unexpected and set the pace for the rest of the movie that while it may have elements of a chick flick, it's also an action movie and people die. Brutally. The fight scenes were real and fast and hard and were choreographed and performed to perfection. Let's face it. Us fans have been waiting with bated breath not only for the movie to finally be a reality, but also for the lust scene. And let me tell you: every girl and even guy in the cinema squealed and swooned when the scene came on. It was admittedly shorter than in the book but it was effective and got the point across. In fact, every scene between Rose and Dimitri, such as the one where he pins her down on the gym floor or the one where he tells her to keep her hair up, crackles with so much electricity and sexual tension I was surprised the air around them didn't just combust. The Lissa/Christian relationship, while somewhat more subdued than the Rose/Dimitri one, still sparked with chemistry and I definitely look forward to seeing it grow.

The script was witty and sharp and so darn funny! The audience definitely enjoyed Rose's dry-wit and sarcasm which found a partner in Christian's own snark. The entire cast worked well to bring some levity into the movie, even Headmistress Kirova participated. Well, somewhat. Her "I could have been a model" rant after Rose stuck the tranquilliser into her resulted in peals of laughter. So yeah, one of the highlights was definitely the quality of the script which not only manages to bring out the comedic undertones of the movie, but also produce stirring speeches like the one Lissa delivers at the end.

The cast was stellar and I was glad no one extremely famous was cast as the main characters, with the exception of the older cast who brought suitable dignity to their characters. Russian Danila Kozlovsky as Dimitri was swoon worthy, his Dimitri extremely believable as the god he's constantly described as. The bare hint of his Russian accent was perfect and believable, exactly what the producers and director wanted, and what we fans looked for. And whoever said that Zoey Deutch was too scrawny to play Rose better eat their words; that girl may be slim and smaller in stature than what people may have imagined, but she kicks major ass. Lucy Fry was elegant and poised as Lissa, even giving her that extra fire and spice that no one thought she was capable of. Dominic Sherwood lent more vulnerability to Christian Ozera while Sami Gayle was the conniving bitch everyone had imagined Mia to be. Cameron Monaghan was great as Mason, but I hope that if, WHEN VA gets picked up for "Frostbite", his role gets fleshed out a little more. Olga Kurylenko and Joely Richardson were believable as the two matriarchs who clearly disliked Rose and Lissa. Perhaps a standout performance was that of Sarah Hyland who played meek, geeky and clumsy Natalie Dashkov to perfection. Her innocence fooled everyone and even I, who knew the entire story, had a difficult time believing that she had been harbouring such a dark side, coaxed by her fear of social isolation and egged on by her desperate father, Viktor Dashkov (Gabriel Byrne) who once again fooled everyone with his weak, fatherly appearance.

Perhaps one of the best compliments that could be given to Vampire Academy, is that you don't feel like you're watching a vampire movie, like Twilight. The vampire element, while clearly the core and soul of the movie, isn't overplayed and sometimes you think you're just watching teenagers try to survive high school and all its problems that I'm sure we could all relate to. Except for the fact that sometimes it's life and death, and that they're vampires. While I respect what the critics have to say, I think they're far too harsh. Saying this movie is a lazy blend of Harry Potter and Twilight is unfair; Vampire Academy is extremely different from those two movies. The characters, what they fight for, the usage of the Romanian legends of Moroi and Strigoi are what make this movie what it is. The students of St. Vlad's may suck at school, but they definitely don't suck at all. OK, I feel I have to explain why I'm giving this movie 9 out of 10, especially as I am far from this movie's main demographic (I'm male and 43).

First of all, I went to see this movie because I had it on a list of movies to see (and I'll spare you the story of how the list came to be because it doesn't matter here), and I went in not knowing anything about it. Not only that, but I didn't see any of the "vampire" stuff that preceded it -- like the Twilight series, Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Vampire Diaries or whatever. That probably matters because when I went into this movie, my memory of vampire movies was bats flying into windows and not a whole lot more. So I was like, whoa there's this whole highly evolved mature vampire universe in this movie! I was impressed by how much there was to it, even if I didn't understand it all.

Which brings me to the one flaw in this movie and why I couldn't give it 10 stars -- which is that it's hard to understand. There's serious flaws in the marketing, and this movie could've done a lot better with better marketing, but this is the one flaw with the movie itself and it's pretty serious. (A lot of other people have criticized the marketing -- the trailer, the green posters, etc, and it's all true, the marketing was bad, but I'm going to skip all that and focus on the film itself.) A first-time viewer, unfamiliar completely with the VA universe, is lost and doesn't understand why what's happening is happening.

But the movie gave me a funny tingly feeling and I was intrigued by that so I saw it a 2nd time. In between the 1st and 2nd viewings, I read up on the back story -- learned all about the different vampire types and the different magic powers they each have and so fourth. The 2nd time I saw the movie, I felt like suddenly I *understood* it. I understood why what was happening was happening. The story is like a jigsaw puzzle; all the pieces fit together tightly, and if you miss a few lines you get lost. Even lines that seem like they are just there for comedic effect are actually integral to the plot. The emotional effect was a lot stronger the 2nd time.

I wondered if the way the book was written was with the author just telling the reader the relevant bits of back-story as it went along. I was curious so I got the first book. Sure enough, that's exactly how it's written. But actually it's worse than that. There's a lot of scenes in the book that are actually flashbacks, that are missing from the movie entirely. The movie has a few flashbacks but the book has more. So the movie viewer is missing back-story times 2 -- once from missing the information that is simply stated as the story goes along, and once again from missing flashbacks that provide back-story as the main story goes along.

I finished the first book and got halfway through the second when the DVD came out. Just watched the movie for a 3rd time on DVD and this time I noticed there's a bunch of stuff in VA that actually foreshadows stuff that comes later. So not only is the viewer confused by missing back-story but is confused by stuff that won't be explained until later movies (if any later movies get made -- which doesn't look likely, but one can always hope.)

All in all, I have to say, the VA books are *very* hard to make into movies. I have a feeling other books, like the Harry Potter books, are more "plot driven", with Character A saying X, character B doing Y -- everything dialog and actions taken by character that translates directly into action and dialog on screen, and everything more or less in chronological order. I haven't read any HP books so I don't know. But I have read some VA and VA is *definitely* not like that. I think the filmmakers underestimated the difficulty of turning these books into movies and the special care they would have to take to make sure the viewer has enough prior information to understand everything that's going on on screen.

Which leaves me at saying, VA is a truly amazing movie, but you have to more than give it a chance -- you have to actually work for it. Reading the books is best, but at the very least you need to know a lot of back-story in order to understand it. The different types of vampires, how they are related, what their magic powers are, what their strengths and weaknesses are, and how the vampire academy (St. Vladimir's) came to be. If you do this, the movie can evoke some surprisingly strong emotions. I wish I could give it 10 stars just for that because it's magic; it's different from any other film I've seen. The visual style of the film is amazing. The technical stuff, like sets, props, editing, pacing, soundtrack, special effects, etc, is all very well done. The actresses who play the two lead characters (Lucy Fry and Zoey Deutsch) put in amazing, top-notch performances.

Unfortunately I think a lot of people didn't have the patience to really understand the story and panned the movie. With so many other great movies to see in the world, I guess I can't blame anyone for doing that. But if you can get past that flaw, and yes it does take extra work on your part as a viewer, VA is a great movie. That's pretty much what it boils down to. Vampire Academy is toothless in both substance and style. Yes, the movie is based on the first book in a series of six teen/young adult Vampire Academy books written by Richelle Mead. The books include: (1) Vampire Academy: Blood Sisters (2007), (2) Vampire Academy: Frostbite (2008), (3) Vampire Academy: Shadow Kiss (2008), (4) Vampire Academy: Blood Promise (2009), (5) Vampire Academy: Spirit Bound (2010), and (6) Vampire Academy: Last Sacrifice (2010). a5c7b9f00b

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