The interview was done in a private club in Sunset Boulevard.
He hid his intense beauty under a baseball cap, a blonde scruff, a lumberkjack shirt, a white tee and washed out jeans. They had the interview on the terrace where he could light up his cigarettes.
Between light coughs and nervous laughs, he explains that he doesn't feel at nyumbani here.
His dream is to work in a black comedy of Todd Solodnz au in dramas for men kwa James Gray au Jacques Audiard.
"I was scared of being cut off from the art-house cinema that I always felt passionate about. I was scared to never be asked to play in anything interesting, that my life would pass and that someone would ask me one day, 'so apart from Twilight, what did wewe do?'. In this industry, you're easily typecast"
"I never proved anything, I was never fooled kwa the hysteria that surrounds me. It's the character that I play, Edward Cullen, the romantic vampire. Besides, before the movie was even made, girls would screams at Stephenie Meyer's public readings."
When he got the script for Cosmopolis: He got the fear of the beginner/novice. "I was so scared I would screw this up that I spent a week trying to find a way to refuse the job. And then I told myself that I shouldn't be so stuck-up. My agent was nervous: 'why would wewe accept if wewe don't understand it?'. I confessed my confusion to David and he liked it. I think that might be why he hired me. Most actors would have try to act cooler, try to say something smart but I was completely lost."
Cronenberg alisema that the actor didn't come on set with his hands in his pockets. That he's an assiduous reader, who's been interested in the character of the 'golden boy' for a long while, one who's close to the one he portrays in Cosmopolis. 'Money' kwa Martin Amis - which describes the giddy heights of easy money and the chic hedonism - is one of his bedtime readings. He finds so many similarities with himself in the empty space of the nyota system, that he wrote how own version of the novel, in hopes of playing it one day.
"I thought about it for Cosmopolis of course but the characters are too different and Cronenberg prefered that I knew nothing. He wanted me to give in, to say my lines in almost an abstract way, like poetry. It was exciting and a little scary. Today I'm nervous about the idea of having to talk to an audience about a movie that stays dark. But Cronenberg, himself, wanted to have something that escapes him. He would tell me about Fellini and say that a filmmaker that has a goal is dead already. It's so much zaidi interesting than to know right away where an artist is gonna take you. Plus, its' the first time I really like one of the sinema I make."
(The makala talks about his family, how his sisters dressed him up as a girl, how he did modeling jobs.)
"At the beginning, I was sort of repelled kwa the vanity of actors. I wanted to write before everything else, but pretty fast I had to find myself. In a humdrum way, uigizaji seemed the best way for me to express what I couldn't say in a different way."
(The makala then mentions his role cut in Vanity Fair and Harry Potter. His verve, his arrogance and his disposition didn't offer him many roles. )
"I was at loss, I would do one uigizaji job after the other without any consistency. Thirty euros days job. When I was offered Twilight, I didn't have a choice. It had been three years that my agent in Hollywood would try to find me a job without any luck. Usually, after six months of unsuccessfull search, you're dead in this industry, but she kept believing. I was never fascinated kwa a role but when I'm chosen I give myself to my character at 150%."
The Twilight saga that was about to eat him whole, will end inayofuata Fall.
"I'm curious to reunite with this universe for the last time, to see the effect it will have on me and on the audience. I feel like the frenzy is starting to die down. We step into the era of The Hunger Games, the world wants fresh meat!"
Today Robert Pattinson has five inayofuata projects lined up, including one in Iraq. And since he knows that "you only get to have one au two failures before you're forgotten," he speaks about going back to muziki and uandishi songs, inspired kwa van Morrison's Beside wewe and Neil Young's ambulance, magari ya wagonjwa Blues. He also has in mind the idea of a movie and a TV show, he never gave up on being his own mwandishi and to work with determination on the script of an ambitious project - a trilogy of fantasty adventures (and politics), freely adaptated from a successful novel.
"People are listening to me right now so I take advantage of it. I don't think authors last very long in our time and I upendo this job way too much to let it go away."
He hid his intense beauty under a baseball cap, a blonde scruff, a lumberkjack shirt, a white tee and washed out jeans. They had the interview on the terrace where he could light up his cigarettes.
Between light coughs and nervous laughs, he explains that he doesn't feel at nyumbani here.
His dream is to work in a black comedy of Todd Solodnz au in dramas for men kwa James Gray au Jacques Audiard.
"I was scared of being cut off from the art-house cinema that I always felt passionate about. I was scared to never be asked to play in anything interesting, that my life would pass and that someone would ask me one day, 'so apart from Twilight, what did wewe do?'. In this industry, you're easily typecast"
"I never proved anything, I was never fooled kwa the hysteria that surrounds me. It's the character that I play, Edward Cullen, the romantic vampire. Besides, before the movie was even made, girls would screams at Stephenie Meyer's public readings."
When he got the script for Cosmopolis: He got the fear of the beginner/novice. "I was so scared I would screw this up that I spent a week trying to find a way to refuse the job. And then I told myself that I shouldn't be so stuck-up. My agent was nervous: 'why would wewe accept if wewe don't understand it?'. I confessed my confusion to David and he liked it. I think that might be why he hired me. Most actors would have try to act cooler, try to say something smart but I was completely lost."
Cronenberg alisema that the actor didn't come on set with his hands in his pockets. That he's an assiduous reader, who's been interested in the character of the 'golden boy' for a long while, one who's close to the one he portrays in Cosmopolis. 'Money' kwa Martin Amis - which describes the giddy heights of easy money and the chic hedonism - is one of his bedtime readings. He finds so many similarities with himself in the empty space of the nyota system, that he wrote how own version of the novel, in hopes of playing it one day.
"I thought about it for Cosmopolis of course but the characters are too different and Cronenberg prefered that I knew nothing. He wanted me to give in, to say my lines in almost an abstract way, like poetry. It was exciting and a little scary. Today I'm nervous about the idea of having to talk to an audience about a movie that stays dark. But Cronenberg, himself, wanted to have something that escapes him. He would tell me about Fellini and say that a filmmaker that has a goal is dead already. It's so much zaidi interesting than to know right away where an artist is gonna take you. Plus, its' the first time I really like one of the sinema I make."
(The makala talks about his family, how his sisters dressed him up as a girl, how he did modeling jobs.)
"At the beginning, I was sort of repelled kwa the vanity of actors. I wanted to write before everything else, but pretty fast I had to find myself. In a humdrum way, uigizaji seemed the best way for me to express what I couldn't say in a different way."
(The makala then mentions his role cut in Vanity Fair and Harry Potter. His verve, his arrogance and his disposition didn't offer him many roles. )
"I was at loss, I would do one uigizaji job after the other without any consistency. Thirty euros days job. When I was offered Twilight, I didn't have a choice. It had been three years that my agent in Hollywood would try to find me a job without any luck. Usually, after six months of unsuccessfull search, you're dead in this industry, but she kept believing. I was never fascinated kwa a role but when I'm chosen I give myself to my character at 150%."
The Twilight saga that was about to eat him whole, will end inayofuata Fall.
"I'm curious to reunite with this universe for the last time, to see the effect it will have on me and on the audience. I feel like the frenzy is starting to die down. We step into the era of The Hunger Games, the world wants fresh meat!"
Today Robert Pattinson has five inayofuata projects lined up, including one in Iraq. And since he knows that "you only get to have one au two failures before you're forgotten," he speaks about going back to muziki and uandishi songs, inspired kwa van Morrison's Beside wewe and Neil Young's ambulance, magari ya wagonjwa Blues. He also has in mind the idea of a movie and a TV show, he never gave up on being his own mwandishi and to work with determination on the script of an ambitious project - a trilogy of fantasty adventures (and politics), freely adaptated from a successful novel.
"People are listening to me right now so I take advantage of it. I don't think authors last very long in our time and I upendo this job way too much to let it go away."
Girls, here is the first image from Cosmopolis, starring Rob.
We were surprised to get this picha so soon because they have just begun to film. We appreciate it though!
Rob and his wife in the movie, played kwa Sarah Gadon, are shown in the backseat of a car in the movie.
Rob plays Erik Parker a millionaire from Manhattan (NYC). The movie is about a siku in the life of Erik, and how the decisions he makes effect the people around him.
In Cosmopolis Rob no longer plays the heart-breaker role we are used to seeing him in and which he played in Twilight, Remember Me and Water for Elephants