source: Pattinson Ladies / robkris13ontwitter via ToR
vendredi 31 août 2012
Sneak Peek at Entertainment Weekly's special edition Twilight cover with Robert Pattinson,
with Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner...
Remember that shoot.....
source: EW / @epnebelle via ROBsessed
'Entertainment Weekly''s special edition 'Twilight' : The Complete Journey will be out in October and will have pics and infos from all 5 films. Here's a sneak peek at the cover with Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner.
to order it...
- Amazon.com
- AmazonUK
- Amazon.fr (but will be in English)
jeudi 30 août 2012
*VIDEO* Masterclass de David Cronenberg pour "Cosmopolis" à la Fnac Montparnasse... le 30 Mai 2012...
*NEW* Bill Condon's itv... about "Breaking dawn, part 2"...
...
from MTV:
source: MTV via RPL
from MTV:
MTV News: How are you feeling? What stage of the post-production process are you in?Bill Condon: We're at the stage of mixing and doing color timing and adding that last big bunch of visual effects shots, and that's where it gets complicated because the [most challenging] ones always come in last, so it's just making sure that they look as good as they can, that's the big thing right now.
...
MTV: Is there one specific FX shot that you're particularly pleased with?Condon: Oh man, there are so many that are so beautiful. I love the way, it's very creepy, but I love the way that Alec's mist looks. He has that mist that can make you blind, deaf and dumb, so that's looking really good. It feels like the best Hammer [horror] movie you've ever seen. It's a little different [type of mist] and sort of has tentacles that can get inside you and all that stuff.
...
MTV: In the last stages of mixing and production, is there something that during filming you liked but have come to love in seeing onscreen?Condon: There's a lot of that. I would say the whole climax, I feel like it's the biggest musical number I've ever directed. It does feel, when you finally get the rhythm of that right, it makes it, I hope, very satisfying.
....
MTV: Have you made any more decisions about the soundtrack? You have so many musicians in that cast.Condon: Oh yeah, that's interesting. I don't know if I'm allowed to talk about it yet but we've just now finally firmed it up so that's exciting.
...
MTV: How about the running time? Is that official yet?Condon: Yeah. The running time is one hour and 56 minutes, one minute shorter than the first one and as such, I think the shortest of all of them.
...you can read the whole interview HERE....
source: MTV via RPL
Matilda Sturridge about Robert Pattinson...
being a "cool godparent"...
from Evening Standard
source: source / LJ: OhNoTheyDidnt via LJ: RPattzDaily
from Evening Standard
“He has what I had and more. We’ve done that kind of Italian thing, where he’s grown up with all our families. I can go to work and there’s no sense of abandonment,” she says. “He’s so easy, so calm, I’ve never seen anyone so happy. I don’t know how he’s so calm with me and Charlie as parents!” Not only that: he has R-Patz as a godfather, by the way. “Yeah, Rudy’s very lucky. He’s got some cool godparents!”
source: source / LJ: OhNoTheyDidnt via LJ: RPattzDaily
mercredi 29 août 2012
dimanche 26 août 2012
RE *REVIEW* ... of "The London Film Review" on "Cosmopolis" and Robert Pattinson...
...
I just LOVE that review (and the guy, David Olertton, who wrote it)...!!
huge thans to Robert Pattinson Australia for bringing it up..!
from The London Film Review :
source: The London Film Review via Robert Pattinson Australia
I just LOVE that review (and the guy, David Olertton, who wrote it)...!!
huge thans to Robert Pattinson Australia for bringing it up..!
from The London Film Review :
“With opinion divided over the merits of Cronenberg’s “Cosmopolis” allow me to weigh in: Cosmopolis is the only film so far this year that I would pay money to re-watch. Which is kind of ironic given that the whole film was about how Capitalism cannot survive.
Too many people are sitting back saying they didn’t get it, there were no guys in costumes blasting energy bolts at each other, no explosions, Pattinson was too passive, the themes were too obscure. There are moanings about the incomprehensible dialogue, the slow pace, the weird climax. Yeah, look: you totally, completely, utterly missed the point. All the things about Cosmopolis that you didn’t understand and are complaining about were exactly the point of the film. Cronenberg roped you in with Pattinson (and what a brilliant call that was, and a great performance by Pattinson, kudos all round), and now you are all “where was the vampire?”
Seriously? Have you ever watched a Cronenberg movie? He doesn’t do mainstream. On a couple of occasions his films blow up and everyone loves them (A History of Violence, Eastern Promises) but generally Cronenberg does his own thing. And he does it very, very well. Forgive him for occasionally marrying a popular art form with intelligent ideas and a twisted sense of humor. That really shouldn’t be allowed. I see that.
Look, go see Expendables 2. Really, go see it. Bunch of aging testosterone fuelled guys blowing stuff up cos that is the American Way- go see it. It wasn’t new in the eighties, it isn’t new now. Go see Batman too. Guy in a daft suit beating up criminals based on a comic book – a movie that has been running on a hype engine for six years. Go see ‘em both. That’s the popcorn entertainment you want, fine, and all power to the respective directors and actors. They’ve done a good job. But please – for the love of god – do not complain that Cosmopolis was incomprehensible whilst munching the popcorn and saying “what a great movie that was” to Expendables 2. Just…don’t. Much as I love comics and much as I enjoy a bit of all out action with Stallone and Arnie, see it for what it is.
Cronenberg, on the other hand is offering you something different.
The incomprehensibility of Cosmopolis was half the point, and eighty percent of the humour. Packer (Pattinson) lives in a world that IS incomprehensible to the majority of us. The humour that most people seem to have missed is that this world is so detached from reality that it has all become meaningless. The characters are completely incapable of having a conversation that doesn’t drift off into obscurity and an inability to communicate with each other. Cronenberg spells this out for you in capital letters in scenes between Packer and his wife. “I find it hard to be detached” says Packer’s wife on discovering he has cheated on her (in a completely sham marriage) – and the line is delivered in the most totally detached voice possible. A protestor sets fire to himself and is dismissed as being unoriginal. Packer, as his whole wold is collapsing, obsesses over buying Rothko – Rothko being the ultimate anti-capitalist artist. These people live in a world so far removed from reality it can only be viewed as a black comedy. Even Pattinson’s character has realized this, leading to his epic swan dive that forms the core of the narrative.
It wasn’t violent enough, wasn’t sexy enough are the other complaints. Actually the film was pretty violent – but Cronenberg chose to have the violence mostly off-screen and on the sidelines, which shows a director at the height of his ability. He respects you as an audience enough to fill in the blanks. Scenes like the security guard outside the limo beating up protesters whilst inside it was business as usual were hilarious, if you were sharp enough to catch it. The underlying black comedy was strung along throughout.
The fact is, Cronenberg made a movie for YOU. The 99%. A movie that reflects, comments on satirizes and parodies our time. A movie to provoke thought, encourage debate, mystify – and to enjoy along the way. And thank God he did because right now the alternative looks like X-men 12 and the Expendables 7. Is that really, honestly all you want from your movies?
But if you are too lazy to get the fact that the fact you didn’t get it was actually the point -Ican’t help you. I didn’t get half of it. That was partly what made it such a breathtaking viewing experience. It challenged me, made me think and made me want to rewatch it. And it looked beautiful along the way, as Packer’s environment gradually degrades, reflecting his owncollapse.
So anyway, there’s my take on Cosmopolis, for what it is worth.
Hi, I’m Dave. I’ll be serving lessons on how to tick everyone off by appearing to be intellectually superior on the way out. In the meantime, take a cookie. They’ve been cut.”
"Breaking Dawn, part 2" Still... with Robert Pattinson...
and Kristen Stewart...
the scans from TwilightItalianMoms were posted earlier HERE...
source: ROBsessed
source: ROBsessed
Justin Stephenson "Cosmopolis" 's Opening & Closing Credits designer shares...
...
Justin Stephenson created the art for the film...
and he recently shared them on his Vimeo account ... Go and have a look (or watch it again if you already saw it on the "big screen")
who is he...?
source: RobPattzNews
Justin Stephenson created the art for the film...
and he recently shared them on his Vimeo account ... Go and have a look (or watch it again if you already saw it on the "big screen")
who is he...?
Justin Stephenson is a moving image designer and filmmaker based in Toronto, Canada.
Justin is currently designing, co-producing and co-directing the animated children's series, Story Explorers for TVO Kids. It is based on the the story telling workshops run by Story Planet, a charity organization that teaches kids literacy through story telling. He is also finishing a film based on the work of Canadian poet bpNichol. The film is a visual exploration of Nichol's work and forms the basis of his graduate degree in Communications and Cultural Studies at York/Ryerson Universities which was defended and in April of 2012.
Justin recently finished designing and animating (through Cuppa Coffee Animation) the credit sequence for David Cronenberg's Cosmopolis. This marks the second collaboration with Mr. Cronenberg and his team, having designed and animated the credits for A Dangerous Method.
source: RobPattzNews
Robert Pattinson about Edward, Twilight, Cosmopolis and so on...
...
from The Chicago Suntimes
It looks like an interview sent to various media outlets since it was posted also today in in the newspaper "Diaro de Mexico" via DiarioTwilght
source: RPLife via Gossip Dance
It has been a summer of discontent for Robert Pattinson. Since his longtime girlfriend and “Twilight” co-star Kristen Stewart was photographed in intimate poses with another man a few weeks ago, the heat on his life has been daunting.
How does he deal with it?”
“It drives you nuts,” he says of all the hoopla. “It’s just nuts."
“I don’t know how I cope with it. I really don’t know,” he says in a good-natured voice.
“At times, I find the whole thing pretty funny. It is pretty funny. My life is kind of ridiculous to me. It’s so absurd at time.”
Last week he fended off countless questions about the scandal while making the media rounds to promote “Cosmopolis,” his new film with director David Cronenberg (“A History of Violence,” “Eastern Promises”).
Through it all, he felt the love of his fans. The Twi-hards definitely have been Team Robert.
“I don’t credit that to myself,” Pattinson says. “It’s just that there is something elemental about the ‘Twilight’ books and the movies. The core story has connected to people.
“The fan love from that is kind of amazing. I guess it’s so much better than everyone hating you."
By now he should have developed an attitude — if only he knew how.
“I want to change. I can’t make myself change. I can’t develop an attitude,” Pattinson says with a goofy giggle that is his trademark.
Adds Cronenberg, “I’ve seen him even try to change and it’s pathetic.”
In “Cosmopolis,” based on the novel by Don DeLillo, Pattinson plays a 28-year-old financial whiz kid and billionaire asset manager whose world is exploding. He gets into his stretch limo to get a haircut from his father’s old barber while wagering his company’s massive fortune on a bet against the Chinese Yuan. His trip across the city becomes a journey as he runs into city riots, various visitors and intimate encounters.
Filming in a limo for so long wasn’t claustrophobic.
“I actually kind of enjoyed it,” he says. “In the beginning, I wanted to stay in the car for the entire day. But it was so unbearably hot. I couldn’t really do this method.“The car made me really concentrate.”
The London-born actor does an American accent in the movie. “I don’t even know what accent I was doing half of the time,” he admits. “I always found that the dialect was written in the lines.”
This fall, he plays vampire Edward Cullen in “Breaking Dawn — Part 2,” meant to be the final installment of the “Twilight” franchise.
Fans of the series are about to enter the depression zone, and Pattinson offers some words of hope.
“I’m sure they’ll have a ‘Twilight’ TV series spinoff soon. They’ll do it again,” Pattinson says.
Would he ever play Edward Cullen again?
“Who knows?” he says. “The only thing that creates a little bit of a problem is that I’m supposed to be 17 forever.
“I’m not sure I can be 17 forever,” he says with another giggle.
He is excited to see what the future holds for him in Hollywood and elsewhere.
“Life is all about luck,” he says. “Getting to this point was lucky. I just hope that my luck holds out.”
Ask him what he knows about life at this point that he didn’t know when he was younger, and he giggles again.
“I basically have learned that I know absolutely nothing,” he says. “I thought I knew it all. Again, I knew absolutely nothing.”
It looks like an interview sent to various media outlets since it was posted also today in in the newspaper "Diaro de Mexico" via DiarioTwilght
source: RPLife via Gossip Dance
samedi 25 août 2012
Inscription à :
Articles (Atom)