"A Thousand Years" is a song recorded by American singer and songwriter Christina Perri, and written by Perri and David Hodges, for The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1. The song was released as a digital download on October 18, 2011, worldwide, and serves as the second single for the movie.
Christina PerriDavid HodgesA Thousand Years/Composers
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2A Thousand Years / Movie
Perri wrote the song based on the emotions that she felt reading about the star-crossed love affair between Edward and Bella throughout Stephenie Meyer's series.
The attacks may have been inspired by an animated character. The act mimics a martial arts move that has become popular on the Internet, called "One Thousand Years of Death." It involves forcing fingers on someone's backside. Investigators say some may consider it a prank, but it's actually quite dangerous.
Since in Latin mille means "thousand", a millennium lasts 1,000 years. Thus, we're living today at the beginning of the third millennium since the birth of Christ.
Twilight Breaking Dawn part 2 - A thousand years scene - YouTube.
Yes it was in the movie it was in the wedding scene when Bella was walking to Edward part one and ending credits of part two. Best wishes. Yeah!!!!
“ A Thousand Years” is a song in which a lover expresses her love for another, only to be weighed down by a tiny doubt of acceptance. This songs has some reference to the love story of Bella and Edward from The Twilight Saga. Every lyric of this song radiates the feeling of love.
Perri is — to put it mildly — rather obsessed with the series, as she told MTV News on Tuesday (September 27). "Yes, I am 1,000 percent a 'Twilight' fan. I can't even deny that I am actually, in fact, a Twi-Hard and have a 'Twilight' tattoo," she laughed, also revealing that she's Team Edward.
PopA Thousand Years / Genre
2011A Thousand Years / Released
Train station chief Dai Jia-he encounters a young girl abandoned at the platform and takes her under his wing.
Dai Tian-qing bonds with Cheng No over the unexpected tragedy and decides to complete the journey.
Cheng No accompanies Tian-qing as she sets out in search of the woman captured in a photo found tucked inside a notebook.
Liu Xiu-zhen tells Tian-qing about her past with Dai Jia-he. Cheng No finds himself at odds with his parents over his career plans.
Xiu-zhen reminisces about the day her romance ended. Tian-qing visits her father's old friend to ask about a cooking recipe that was left behind.
Wu Bo-sen's dad grows concerned about his son's decision to join a music contest. Tian-yu and Tian-qing try to reach out to their father's old friend.
Jia-he's photo of the Mikado pheasant sheds light on a past misunderstanding with Mr. Hsin. Cheng No is troubled by his parents' fraught relationship.
No One Writes to the Colonel by Gabriel García Márquez, published during 1961, is a novella concerning an impoverished, retired colonel, a veteran of the Thousand Days' War who was present at the signing of the Treaty of Neerlandia and still hopes to receive his pension promised to him some fifteen years previously.
One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez, published during 1967, chronicles 100 years in Macondo, a fictional Colombian village. The novel describes the involvement of one of the village's residents, Colonel Aureliano Buendia, in the conflict between Colombia's Liberal and Conservative parties.