6 Best Films of Kristen Stewart
Since she was a child, Kristen Stewart has been performing, so it's no wonder she's been with her fair number of flops and successes. She is best known in the "Twilight" series for her role as Bella Swan. Still, she has worked in a wide range of genres, including dramas, thrillers, comedies, and period pieces. Posted On December 1st, 2020
Underwater
Stewart plays Norah Price, an uncompromising mechanical engineer. She must figure a way to thrive after a catastrophic earthquake dismantles a submarine in 20th Century Fox's Underwater. Takes a turn when Price and her peers discover that they may not be the only underwater species.
Certain Women
Reichardt has brought us unfinished, silently suffering women who feel their way into the change from her excellent debut film, River of Grass, through Meek's Cutoff and Wendy and Lucy. Three actors known for intense, soulful performances join an electrifying newcomer in her new film Certain Women. A portmanteau of loosely connected episodes based on stories by Montana writer Maile Meloy, to play women trapped in becalmed lives that feel too small for them.
Camp X-Ray
Kristen Stewart acts as Amy, a young woman who wants to shake her little Florida town from the dust and see the world in the U.S. The military. Alas, as she becomes part of a unit that monitors detainees 24/7, her first big task takes her not very far from home.
Lizzie
"Lizzie" is a suspense thriller based on the murders of the father and stepmother of Borden in 1892. Sevigny plays the titular character in the days leading up to the murders that she was convicted, charged, and acquitted. She is supported by Kristen Stewart, who's on the verge of stardom in "Twilight" in 2008 when Sevigny first attempted to make this film and plays the family's servant and the beloved of Borden, Bridget.
In Land of Women
This little jewel centres Stewart as a teen who sparks up a growing relationship with an older guy (Adam Brody) visiting next door. Who himself seeks a bond with the girl's cancer-stricken mom, Sweet and captivating, wins the day (Meg Ryan). Complicated feelings abound, for sure, but with its unmistakable heart, it draws you in.
Still Alice
In Still Alice, as the girl, whose response to her mother's distressing therapeutic situation is the very definition of impeccable supporting performance. She is effective in an evenly unshowy role. Julianne Moore deservingly won the Oscar for her depiction of a linguistic professor coping with early-onset Alzheimer's. Still, Stewart is there throughout, silently backing her up.