Twilight Saga Movies Return to Theaters for 20th Anniversary

The Twilight Saga Logo

The glitter returns. Not on your laptop. Not on a phone at 2× speed. On a towering screen where the Pacific Northwest fog actually feels cold and the baseball scene cracks like thunder. Twenty years after the book that started it all, the Twilight films are slipping back into theaters—one night per movie—like a pale shadow crossing the moon. Nostalgia? Yes. Spectacle? Also yes. Team Jacob vs. Team Edward discourse at full volume in the lobby? Inevitably.

When the covens gather

Five nights. Five chapters. A neat little ritual.

  • Wed, Oct 29, 2025 — Twilight


  • Thu, Oct 30, 2025 — New Moon


  • Fri, Oct 31, 2025 — Eclipse


  • Sat, Nov 1, 2025 — Breaking Dawn – Part 1


  • Sun, Nov 2, 2025 — Breaking Dawn – Part 2


One ticket per film, scarce seats, plenty of squeals. Some showings add fresh creator roundtables—small doors into old rooms, where production stories finally exhale.

A pre-game loop (because self-control is a myth)

Warm-up week: all five movies running in a continuous online loop from September 7–14, 2025. Drop in. Drop out. Pretend you’re only watching the baseball scene and—oops—now it’s midnight again. Then go claim your theater seats like a vampire staking territory.

Why now?

Because twenty years is a long time. And also no time at all. The saga left, the memes stayed, the edits multiplied, and the leads reinvented themselves while the fandom quietly stockpiled inside jokes. A tease—“Forever begins again”—lit the fuse. Boom. We’re back in Forks, arguing about imprinting like it’s 2009.

Beyond the screen (Forks calls)

There’s a festival humming in the background: Forever Twilight in Forks, September 11–14, 2025. Photo ops. Panels. A town that cosplays as itself. If you’ve ever wanted the rain to feel canonical, this is your pilgrimage.

The ledger of obsession

Five films. A global haul north of $3.3 billion. Soundtracks that still own gym playlists and moody commutes. The re-release isn’t just victory laps; it’s context—new commentary, old chemistry, and the strange delight of hearing a packed room gasp at the exact same second.

Strategy for mortals (and immortals)

  • Move fast. One-night screenings vanish like mist at sunrise.

  • Pre-watch smart. Use the loop to choose your must-see chapters on a giant screen.

  • Hunt extras. If a showing includes roundtables, pounce—fresh lore ages well.

That’s the shape of it: brisk nights, big feelings, glitter in 4K. The past returns, slightly sharpened, still ridiculous, still irresistible. Bring a friend who’s never seen them. Or an enemy. Either way—fun.

Comments