Showing posts with label Kristen Stewart Interviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kristen Stewart Interviews. Show all posts
Friday, March 23, 2012
Monday, February 27, 2012
Thursday, February 23, 2012
New/Old Interview w/Kristen Stewart from BD Promo!
New/Old Interview w/ Kristen Stewart from the Breaking Dawn Promo Press Junket. She talks about Bella's character transition, her character on On the Road, and even mentions Rob's jelousy of Tay...er Jacob. Lol at 8:45
Monday, February 13, 2012
Interview w/ Kristen Stewart from SWATH set!
New SWATH Still now in HQ via PopSugar
-Is there something you admire about Snow White? Yes. It’s strange playing a character that you actually could never truly embody. Her spirit affects people. . . I can’t have Snow White’s effect on people. I can’t actually be completely selfless because nobody is. You can only really play a character like that in a fairy tale and play it with an awful load of integrity. She’s very fully formed, but very farfetched-from-the-reality-that-we-live-in type of person. She also is strong in a very different way than you’d expect. Strength, yeah, but also gusto. I mean, she’s strong. She can kick ass. It hurts very much to do so and so it’s not like you’re watching her go take down a kingdom. You’re not watching going, "Yeah! Kill him!" Really it’s more like you’re watching someone having to do something that doesn’t just go against your sensibilities or that you agree with. It’s gutting. It’s physically gutting, literally. A million reasons, but she’s special.
-Do you like that she’s not like your prissy fairy tale? Yeah, because that’s just a very surface, though she is prissy sometimes. That’s the other thing. It takes her the whole movie basically to become who I’m talking about now. I’m really sort of talking in retrospect. It’s strange. It’s a total identity movie. It’s all about not finding yourself, but actually just being OK with who you always have been and not being ashamed of being the only one who sees the light. It’s an enormous burden and she’s so stunted. She was put away when she was 7 years old and your mother and your father were killed basically right in front of you. We’re not doing the version of a fairy tale that wouldn’t deal with all of those things, where you just sort of skim over all those things, and it's like all of these things are actually really important to the characters. She literally bleeds for her land and her people, and that’s just such a cool concept for me because it’s other people caring about people. It’s very simple, but it’s so common. Every day all the time you see people not caring about each other, and this is just about that.
-She learns to be a leader or she’s born a leader inside, do you think? She’s definitely a born leader. I mean, it’s literally pumping through those veins, but it’s been taken from her. She’s been so stolen from.
-Is it helping you get into the character's mindset to wear those cool costumes? Absolutely. If you look down and something doesn’t feel like you would definitely be wearing it, or if you go to grab your knife and it flops around or — basically [Colleen Atwood] thinks about every detail. It’s so wearable. I also have puffy sleeves. Somehow she manages to make puffy sleeves look butch. I was always expecting to personally wind up in a — basically what I’m wearing underneath it, like that little blue dress, which is just thin and wispy. I was really happy that she’s got something heavy on — a bit of armor before she actually finds her own armor.
-How did you feel the first time you put on the armor? Did you feel more badass? Yeah. That’s the first thing you want to [pound your chest]. Also, my armor doesn’t have a huge top on it. All the guys, unfortunately, they [raise their arms] and they hit themselves in the head. I can run around in mine. Somehow the armor on the men — unless they’re on horseback and they look amazing, but there’s also something kind of dainty about it, too, like pointy toes. It fits a woman’s body better, I feel. I don’t know, the guys running around suddenly look like little toys — slightly feminine little toys.
-Both Snow White and Bella had traumatizing experiences in the woods — being led out to die or have her heart broken — compare those two experiences? Well, it’s funny. I think [Snow White] genuinely lacks that innate fear of death that we all have. She’s got a serious, fierce survival — not skills, but insights. But she isn’t afraid of anything. What’s harder is to have dreams and hopes that you lived your whole life sort of be just shattered in front of you. So I think probably it’s totally impossible to compare the two. And I know that doesn’t make sense, but I kind of can’t compare.
-Can you compare the movies in general? Are there similarities at all? Bella and Snow White both come to find that they’re leaders. I mean, that’s definitely a similarity. They’re different. They’re very, very, very, different people. Also, I guess in a very sort of righteous way as well it’s all very like — everyone’s telling them “no” and both of them I guess see the light. Both of them are sort of a little more intuitive and spiritually, for whatever reason, connected and their gut is always sort of dead right.
-What about working with Chris surprised you? Did you have any preconceptions of him? Before I met him, I was like, "gosh, so charming." You know what I mean? Like he’s so ridiculously, seemingly nice. Movie-star caliber nice. But he really actually just is. But then again, it’s strange working — cause I mean it’s not a secret. It was completely different part before. It was totally like a rethought. So when he came in it was like "Wow! This is f*cking interesting!" I mean, it was like they really elevated it. Chris is an amazing, nice guy and also [has] great instincts and he can roll with everything on set. He’s really relaxed, whereas I’m always like, "oh my god!" I use my anxiety to do this and he’s always sort of like — he’s a good energy for me. I really like working with him.
-You actually punched Chris filming a scene and gave him a black eye? It’s actually a very confidence building experience. I don’t like punching anyone. So, you know, when you dream and your hand just slides right down their face, it doesn’t do that in real life. It really works. God, that really made me feel horrible, though. I mean, like instantly hot tears and I was like "oops!" We were watching it. It looks — it’ll be in the movie. Favorite fairy tale as a kid? I honestly don’t — somebody asked this the other day. I wasn’t here til the end of fairy tales. I really liked The Jungle Book. I was obsessed with The Jungle Book.
-Chris said Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit. He is obsessed with Lord of the Rings and he was always like humming Enya as we were trudging up the mountain. I was saying basically, "You should make a remake of Lord of the Rings. Why are you doing this? . . . We’re doing Snow White and the Huntsmen, Chris!"
viaRobstenation
Monday, January 23, 2012
Fashionista Rachel Zoe Was Recently Interviewd, She Revealed She's TEAM EDWARD!
Famous Fashionista Rachel Zoe, was recently interviewed by Team Twilight. Not only did she reveal she was Team Edward, she also reveals what she thinks of the Twilight Series! Read on and see what she had to say...
You’ve spoken publicly about your love for Twilight. What is it about the series that you love so much?
Rachel Zoe: I would say that you completely lose yourself in the purest form of romance. It’s the first time in so long that you get to see such a strong love, and get so caught up in it without any of the physicality
You’ve also been outspoken about your crush on Robert Pattinson. Have you gotten to meet him yet?
RZ: No, I have not met Rob. But, I have many mutual friends and have heard nothing but the loveliest things about him. I think he’s a very talented actor and would love to meet him in the future.
If you could style any of the Twilight cast, who would you pick and why?
RZ: Bella and Edward — I would love to dress them as a couple because I think that’s always fun.
If you had to pick: Twilight books or movies?
RZ: Movies, because I’m an extremely visual person. I actually read the books after the movies, which was fun because I could see Kristen and Robert as Bella and Edward.
Team Edward or Team Jacob?
RZ: Team Edward, obvi.
via
Kristen Stewart's Interviews Over the Years
Thursday, January 5, 2012
New/Old Pix of Rob and Kristen from the BD Press Conference from Cinemag now in HQ and Interview Transcript
(PD): How does it feel to be in a franchise that is quite large with so
manyfans who are crazy about this story?
(KS): People who like Twilight is one who can see beauty in a scary situation like this. The reason why became a saga Twilight isbecause we think young people seriously. We think of themselves andtheir decisions is important that they appreciate this.
(PD): Role Models such as whether the figure of a Bella?
(KS): What can my relationship with my personality is that he follow his feelings before he knew what was causing it to feel the emotion. He was a very oriented on courage. This is what I love about myself a Bella.
(PD): What was it like doing intimate scenes with your lover?
(KS): We find it strange, then comfort, then weird again. When we do sex scenes, I do not feel nervous because it's very easy to make it fun and no scene is captured in one take.
(PD): How would you describe the price you pay for a popularity?
(RP): A little frustrating when you can not do anything with ease. You can not do anything without first planned, and also there is little fear when you're alone. I now rarely do everything alone and it is my desire. But, maybe this will not last forever. In addition, I also think if I throw away everything, I'll regret it some day. Therefore, I try to live it.(PD): What do you think of when seeing the word "twilight"?
(RP): A lot of things I could associate with that word, but I think in the next ten years, I can understand the meaning of the word "twilight" real. For now, says this is my job. Every day, 24 hours a day.
(PD): Tell me how your relationship with Kristen Stewart, who becomes your girlfriend in the past two years, and Taylor Lautner.
(RP): Experiences like this really change an individual in many ways.However, it is really fun when you have two friends who do the 'journey' is the same. We all encourage each other to each other and remind each other if one of us has changed. We are bound by feelings of mutual respect after being involved in five films together.
pix (HQ) via Kstewartfans and Pattinsonlife
Sources DoDazzle via veryluckylady88
Transcript via Gossip-Dance via Believe_Them via Robstenation
Sunday, December 25, 2011
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Robsten Interview with IMDb
Talks about BD Honeymoon,Twilight and Kristen
Via RPLife Via Robsten Dreams
Kristen talks about Twilight,Bella, favorite actors, and growing up!
uploaded via @Fiorels90
Source imdb Via youtube Via Robsten Dreams
Via RPLife Via Robsten Dreams
Kristen talks about Twilight,Bella, favorite actors, and growing up!
uploaded via @Fiorels90
Source imdb Via youtube Via Robsten Dreams
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Monday, November 14, 2011
More Robsten Interviews
Kristen's Interview with On The Red Carpet
Via mfoc Via Robsten Dreams
Kristen Interview with "Blick" (Switzerland)
Oscar winner Arthur Cohn forewarned me: "She's an excellent actress and brilliant, but very shy." He's speaking of Kristen Stewart. He has to know it, after all he discovered her as a young girl. Meanwhile she's become a world star thanks to "Twilight". But the fame hasn't changed her personally. At the meeting it turns out that Arthur prepared me appropriately for meeting Kristen. It fits completely: She's not the one who simply bubbles away, answers no question till she's weighed the words [in German: till it (the question) passed the gold balance test]. Before she opens her mouth, the brain has to give the "Okay" first.
To her "I don't like to be a star"-image the Chanel dress and the stilettos with the golden heels and the platform soles don't really fit. A confession to the show business: "I will be comfortable in a certain hoodie of mine no matter what mood I am in. ... And I need pockets, 'cause if I carried a bag, I'd lose it purposely."
For a shy being you go really hard in the sex scenes in Breaking Dawn. The word is that some r-rated scenes were cut.
It wasn't that bad. Indeed there was only a small circle of people admitted when Rob and me were filmed in bed. But we didn't do anything what would be r-rated.
The sex with Rob was simulated. Did you still feel nervous to do "it" in front of the camera?
Honestly, at the beginning I felt really strange. But I don't belong to those people who need a drink before such scenes. At the end it's a job you're doing. And besides, I don't drink while working.
On the other hand, your fans will be needing a sip to calm down when your Twilight-baby is born. Will you tell us one secret: Does Bella die at birth?
I'm not quite sure. Her heart stops beating, but her soul is still in her.
Religious spectators could feel sensitive about the resurrection in the style of Twilight.
I have no idea what the church says to this.
One can well imagine that the audience is shocked about your physical appearance in the birth scene: "My god, Kristen's appearance is only skin and bones!" How much weight did you have to lose for this scene?
Source Translation: adorablekstew from Robsteners Via Robsten Dreams
Rob Interview with The Scotsman
Robert Pattinson is bewildered by just how famous he is. As the Twilight saga draws to a close, the actor, a curious mix of charm and awkwardness, offers a glimpse into his surreal world
“I was on the 209 bus last week,” I blurt to Robert Pattinson by way of an introduction. He looks wary. It’s fair enough. We’re in Los Angeles, in a room on the 10th floor of the Four Seasons hotel and the 209 is a bus that trundles through south west London. The reason I mention it is because it stops in Barnes, the leafy suburb where Pattinson grew up and where his parents still live. It’s a village, really, quaint and terribly English, peppered with ye olde pubs patronised by older gents in red socks and corduroys, the casual attire of the retired banker. It’s most definitely not Beverly Hills.
“That’s the bus that goes to where my parents live,” he says, looking confused. “And it’s the bus I took to my prep school in Sheen.”
I didn’t mention the 209 to freak Pattinson out, although I’m quickly learning how skittish he is. I wasn’t trying to be quirky, or to ingratiate myself; I was aiming to just say something ordinary, something simple and real, because it’s not difficult to work out that simple and real are not major features of Pattinson’s life. After all, he’s Edward Cullen, brooding vampire hero of the Twilight Saga, the cinematic juggernaut that started in 2008 and, with a release each year since, draws to a close with Breaking Dawn, the first part of which is out this month, followed by the second and final part, already shot but to be released in November 2012.
Before Twilight, Pattinson, 25, was anonymous. Now, there isn’t really anywhere he can go without being recognised. Pie shops in Yorkshire, karaoke bars in Texas – there’s no escape from Edward Cullen and the millions of fans who want their necks nibbled, mothers who’d like their daughters signed (really) or at the very least a photograph to put on Facebook.
It’s the reason Pattinson lives in hotels, to stay one step ahead.
“It’s good to be able to escape,” he says. “But I’ve started to feel recently that having a home would be good. You do kind of lose yourself when you’re living out of bags the whole time. But if I had a home I’d worry about it too much. And I hate spending money. If I could find a house for free that’d be amazing.”
He laughs and then looks serious again. It’s typical Pattinson delivery, a kind of subdued stream of consciousness in which he talks himself in and out of things, then relies on humour to lighten things up, not always convincingly.
“I rented a house in LA last year,” he says. “It was great for ages and then people found out about it and so there were people outside all the time. I had to go away for work and people were going up to it and taking pictures of themselves beside the house. People are crazy.”
You don’t really have to have seen any of the Twilight movies to know what they’re about. Based on Stephenie Meyer’s blockbuster novels, the movies tell the tale of the fated romance between Edward, a 110-year-old vampire who looks forever 17, and Bella (Kristen Stewart) who is human. The first three parts that have been released since 2008 have made nearly $2billion. They’ve also made Pattinson into a global star.
The hotel corridor is dotted with more women with clipboards than I can count. They stand in pairs, marking things down (what I wonder?). Outside the room in which I find Pattinson, sitting in a corner, looking as inconspicuous as a six foot movie star can possibly look, dressed down in jeans and Converse, with a scuzzy looking T-shirt underneath a canvas jacket, there are two burly security guards with inscrutable facial expressions and jackets that are slightly straining at the button.
“There are more organisers here than we have on the set,” Pattinson says. “Having security walking up and down the corridor as if something’s going to happen is freaking me out.”
It’s no wonder he’s nervous. He’s had some dicey experiences. The last time he was in London (promoting Water for Elephants, in which he starred with Reese Witherspoon) he was followed by one particular photographer for the whole week. It was odd, he says, and it got dangerous.
“In America there are loads of people who follow me around at the same time but this was just one guy who was just on me the whole time I was there. He was obsessed. I got in a taxi and he jumped off his motorbike and got in. He just opened the door and jumped in but he had a motorbike helmet on and I literally thought I was going to be assassinated.”
I check to see if he’s joking. He kind of is, but not entirely.
“It was the craziest thing, the weirdest thing that’s ever happened. And the cab driver just drove off because he was so freaked out as well. The guy fell out. It was like an action movie.”
It’s not hard to understand then why Pattinson is circumspect. You would be if you were the subject of an app called “Where’s Robert?”, which details your every move for fans to follow. But there’s something else too. In every interview Pattinson’s ever given, at least as much attention is focused on his meteoric rise to fame and all its trappings as the acting that actually got him there. It’s impossible not to dwell on it, partly because it’s so extreme and partly because he seems so bewildered by it, so genuinely uncomfortable and ill-suited to the whole thing.
The question is: how someone as self-conscious, awkward and self-deprecating has ended up starting his movie career in one massive movie franchise (Pattinson was Cedric Diggory in two Harry Potter films) and the leading man in another?
The way Pattinson tells it, it’s all been a bit of an accident. He started going along to Barnes Theatre Club because his dad told him he’d meet girls there. Then there was a stint as a model (his mum worked for a modelling agency) but he was “rubbish” and didn’t get any jobs. He was 17 when he landed the role of Diggory in The Goblet of Fire after having fallen asleep in the queue outside the audition room. (Being very relaxed seems to work for Pattinson. He took half a Valium before his audition for the first Twilight movie.) There was a slight blip after the Potter films when he landed a role in a play at the Royal Court but was fired before the opening night, but not long after Twilight came along and that was that.
There’s no doubt he feels lucky, if slightly incredulous, that things have worked out the way they have, but he reckons that having “fallen into” his career makes it harder for him to cope with all the scrutiny and attention that goes with his level of fame.
“At least if you’ve been striving for it your whole life then you’ve got that justification – this is what it is and this is what I’ve wanted. Maybe then you wouldn’t feel disillusioned with it. I guess the people who really work for it have this part of their persona which is just ready to go when they become famous. When they walk into a room and everyone turns round they’re like ‘yeah, they should be looking at me’. When I walk into a room and everyone turns round I feel exactly as I did before Twilight, which is like ‘what’s happening? This is weird.’ ”
But surely he must’ve wanted it a bit?
“I wanted something,” he says with a shrug.
Pattinson may be unsuited to being a heartthrob temperamentally, but when it comes to how he looks, it’s a different story. His cheekbones jut from his face in an almost unseemly way. Heavy brows give him a brooding intensity (his looks were described as Byronic by a producer of the first Twilight movie) and his mouth sits in a permanent, natural pout. Vanity Fair dubbed him the most handsome man in the world. How funny then that when Pattinson was announced as Edward Cullen, there was outrage. Fans of the books went crazy – they thought he was too ugly, “repulsive” they shrieked on internet fansites. Then he appeared, all pale and intense and they melted. Actually, that makes them sound a bit too passive. They didn’t melt as much as coalesce into a baying mob who couldn’t get enough of tragic, tortured Edward.
“I guess I got accepted, sort of,” he says squirming. “The reason people like it is because it’s in their imaginations. It means that the performances don’t really matter, it’s more about whether the face looks right. That warrants a certain degree of acceptance, even reluctant acceptance. It’s just a kind of brainwashing.” He laughs nervously.
Pattinson always has an explanation that deflects attention away from him. He takes modesty, ramps it up with inconsistent eye contact, an endless supply of self-effacing anecdotes and an air of utter bafflement that creates a genuine awkwardness. I don’t care about the £12million pay cheque (the amount he’s reportedly earned for the Twilight movies) it’s hard not to sympathise.
But not everyone does. Some people find the awkwardness off-putting. In a group or being interviewed on camera his body language is a study in self-consciousness, he folds himself up as if he’s trying to disappear. His chat can be similarly tricky. He sometimes laughs a little longer than he should and his stories have a tendency to peter out. One to one, he’s more relaxed, but it’s not easy.
And, of course, there’s also resentment. Either people are angered by the popularity of Twilight or they’re annoyed that someone could just stumble into a career like Pattinson’s. Earlier in the day, before I meet him one on one, I overhear a plump Italian journalist with Kevin Keegan curls demand of him, “What happened to your hair?”
It’s true, Pattinson’s hair was looking a bit odd, shaved on one side with long strands on the other. It looked homemade. But, still, the question was rude. And yet Pattinson’s reaction couldn’t have been more meek.
“It was for the last movie [Cosmopolis] I did,” he explained. “I had to have loads of bits randomly cut into so then I was going to shave my head and then I just shaved that bit and decided I kind of liked it.” He shrugged and laughed awkwardly. “I decided to just leave it.”
You’d think at some level Pattinson’s success might have made him a little big headed. In a way, it’s hard not to wish it had. Isn’t that at least part of what being a movie star is about – ego?
Pattinson says he was cockier before Twilight, when he could be who he wanted, say whatever he wanted because no one knew who he was.
“When no one knows who you are you can walk into a room and say anything. You can say you’re the greatest person in the world and no one can say you’re not because they don’t know you. But now they can say ‘I know you, why are you trying to be this? Why are you trying to be that?’ The best thing you can do is stay hidden.”
But how do you stay hidden from 30,000 fans who turn up to hear a 10-minute Q&A as they did at the Olympic Stadium in Munich? Or when you have to appear at Comic-Con and the queues are round the block? I wonder if he feels that people come to see him, or whether they want to see Edward?
“In some ways it helps to think that they’re coming to see Edward. But in other ways it’s saddening. It depends what mood I’m in. It’s a funny thing to see a crowd of people looking at you and knowing that they’re not actually seeing you at all, they’re just seeing whatever it is they imagine you to be.
“You can’t change. You can’t just suddenly decide to be different. I remember coming to LA before and I’d be a totally different person to who I was in London. I always used to look forward to coming over for three months of castings because I could just bullshit the whole time and feel really great about myself even though I wasn’t getting any jobs.” He laughs at the absurdity. “I got to meet all these really interesting people. But now, people have immediate preconceptions about me. I end up having the same conversation a lot. People assume there’s only one talking point.”
Suddenly you start to understand at least a part of the bond between Pattinson and his co-star Stewart: they’re Twilight survivors. Pattinson speaks about Stewart affectionately and he’s clearly full of admiration for her as an actor. Neither of them has ever said a word publicly about whether they are in a relationship despite endless speculation and photographs of them together all over the world. But why would they? Why would they give up something which, so far, they’ve managed to keep for themselves?
It’s a similar story with music. Pattinson is a talented musician and for a while he thought that music might be his career. He had a track on the first Twilight soundtrack. But ask him how it’s going now and he looks like he’d rather pull out his own teeth than talk about it.
“Erm, I’m just writing stuff. I don’t really know. It’s very easy to get labelled. I don’t really know how to go about the music stuff just now.”
Maybe his success as an actor has got in the way?
“Completely,” he says, looking sheepish. “For some reason everyone wants to shit on actors more than anyone else.”
To be fair, there can’t be much time for music. Since Pattinson finished shooting Breaking Dawn, he’s made Cosmopolis with David Cronenberg and Bel Ami, an adaptation of a Guy de Maupassant story of the same name, with Uma Thurman. Didn’t he want to have a break?
“The world moves so quickly now,” he says. “You’ve always got to have stuff lined up. Especially me. Anyone who got big in the last few years, the Twitter age, your shelf life is so short because people’s opinions change so quickly. You’ve got to give constant updates or announcements, even if the movie doesn’t exist, just to have something to announce.
“You’ve got to constantly change people’s perceptions. It’s like, ‘yeah, I’m playing a lesbian robot’ so that people don’t know what to think. If you leave it then it’s like ‘oh, it’s just that guy from Twilight’; it fossilises.”
But the problem for Pattinson is that with the work comes the promotion and even more attention and that’s when things get tricky. There’s no point fighting it, it’s just not his thing.
“The thing I’m most afraid of, because everything is pushing in that direction, is literally just making myself a product. As soon as you start doing Twitter and adverts and straying away what you started out doing and just being a personality, that’s when you get huge money but it’s also when you go crazy.”
Time’s up and to be honest, I almost feel relieved on Pattinson’s behalf. He’s survived another interview and now he can get on with trying to be invisible.
“I’ll think of you the next time I’m on the 209,” I tell him.
“You’ll probably see my mum,” he says. And laughs.
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 (12A) is on general release from 18 November.
Source scotsman Via twitter Via Robsten Dreams
Rob, Kristen and Taylor Interview with Manila Bulletin
LOS ANGELES – When Kristen Stewart, Taylor Lautner and Robert Pattinson met us in a Beverly Hills hotel one lovely afternoon, the three stars of “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn-Part 1” talked of their ever growing friendship, how they bonded when not filming, the two final parts of the popular franchise and what all this “Twilight” experience has done to them.
On doing Parts 1 and 2, the lovely Kristen, now 21, said, “I wanted to remember the experiences as something that happened to me rather than something that I made and you really rarely get that opportunity.”
In this movie, Bella and Edward get married and have their first vampire-human baby.
On doing the wedding and birthing scenes, Kristen revealed, “It’s funny comparing the wedding scene to the birth scene, the experience of it. They couldn’t have been more different. I cleared my head so successfully before I walked down the aisle that I just didn’t think. No choices were made, it just happened. As with the birth scene, I just wanted to push it further and further. I didn’t want to stop shooting it and that’s because reading the book is so viscerally grotesque. It hurts to read it but at the same time, the most beautiful thing is coming out of it. She is achieving all of what she’s dreamed of and it is literally summed up in what’s inside. It’s in the baby and obviously, it defines her character. She has been talking about being able to throw it all away. I will die for this. That’s a grand statement to make and so to see her get within an inch of that is as if she was not lying. She’s a machine. It was cool to play raw emotion that was so fundamental. Every human being can relate to it as if the role was very physical.”
On how close the three of them have become, Kristen disclosed, “We are so lucky to have each other in this. It’s funny. We don’t have the type of relationship that you find on sets that you know each other within a very particular context like only on the set of ‘Twilight.’ Every time I remember that I have not talked to Taylor in a while, it rather worries me. It shocks me going whoa, where is he?A perfect example was the other day when we put our hands in cement at the Hollywood Walk of Fame. I felt ridiculous looking down at my tiny hands. I was just thinking like God, I can’t believe this is happening and then you look to the right, you look to the left and it makes sense. Taylor and Robert are amazing. I couldn’t have done it without them. It would have just been a very different experience.”
In fact during breaks, Kristen who loves to cook, makes Taylor and Robert their favorite soups. “Taylor likes asparagus soup and Robert loves tortilla soup,” Kristen disclosed.
The charming 19-year-old Taylor confirmed, “The three of us are so close we are able to talk as friends. We have grown up together for the past four years and that has been a major help. It made things a lot easier.”
When not working, Taylor revealed that the three of them spend time together. “When we are on set, the mood is very light and we have a lot of fun together. Whenever we wrap, whatever time we have left over we will go out to eat.”
On doing “Breaking Dawn,” Taylor said, “This one deals with the same Jacob we’ve always seen before. He is immature; he is selfish. When he doesn’t get what he wants he pouts about it or handles it the wrong way. Throughout the movie, we see him grow. We see him make choices and make decisions that are more difficult. He is forced to mature and become a man in this one. By the end of it, something happens, the imprinting. He realizes why everything has been happening this way. He is not meant to be with Bella. We will be able to explore in Part 2 the outcome of all that.”
As for putting their imprints on the Hollywood’s Walk of Fame, Taylor revealed, “If I had to choose one moment within the past years that has been the most surreal, it would be that because I remember when I first moved here from Michigan when I was 11 years old. I walked down the Walk of Fame, looked at the stars and looked at the hand and footprints. It was just the coolest thing. I never thought ever when I was looking at those that I would actually be there one day. It’s kind of funny because I didn’t for some reason think it was going to be such an event when we did it. I thought the three of us were just going to show up and put our hands in some wet cement. But no, there was like thousands of fans there and helicopters. It made me nervous. I’m like oh, I don’t want to mess my hand print. What if I mess up, it’s going to be there forever. Then you have all the attention on top of that. My hands were shaking a little bit.”
As for Robert, 25, he talked of how frustrated he was of Edward’s behavior in Part 1. “I have never been really frustrated by Edward’s behavior in any of the other movies,” he confessed. “I remember reading the book and I got more and more disgusted by his passivity until the point where at the wedding, Jacob is having the first dance with Bella. I am like what is happening. This is totally crazy. But I understood it more after Bella gets pregnant. When you fall in love with someone, you are in a totally hopeless position. You feel you have no power at all. So as soon as she starts going off on her own journey, all you can do as a guy is feel totally helpless. It is a very specific thing to Edward. I definitely don’t like it when he passes the buck a little bit to Jacob. I always thought that was kind of giving up on her a little bit.”
Robert explained, “It is even more extreme in the book. He literally says to Jacob, you would be better with her. As soon as Bella gets pregnant with this thing, a matter that’s growing inside, it’s as if all the doubt and the self-loathing that he’s felt in all the other ones overwhelm him. He just cannot control himself. He can’t handle it all. He has to let go of his ego, his past and just rebuild himself. In the second part of the movie, he is basically a different person.”
As for their bonding, the down-to-earth Robert said, “It is really incredible that we did five movies and we are still the best of friends. Some people do movies together and start as friends. Then in the end, they are no longer friends. So to be able to share and go through this same experience with two other people is earth-shattering.”
Formerly a Manila journalist, Los Angeles-based Janet Susan R. Nepales is a member of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.
Source mb.com Via robstenation Via robpattinson Via Robsten Dreams
Rob Interview with Chicago Sun Times
Vampire love is not bloody easy.
Robert Pattinson — a.k.a. Edward Cullen in “Breaking Dawn — Part 1” — tells the Sun-Times that his big-screen honeymoon was met with nervous jitters.
From the groom.
“I felt such pressure when vampire Edward had to make love to his mortal wife Bella for the first time,” Pattinson says. “Let’s face it. The wedding is on the girl. The guy has to step up for the honeymoon.
“On the honeymoon, Edward insists they play a lot of chess to avoid … other things,” he says with a laugh. “I read that in the script and said, ‘Come on! Kristen looks so amazing in these little nighties. I don’t think chess is what’s on his mind.’ ”
Despite the real-life quandary of “are they or aren’t they dating,” Pattinson says it was “awkward to make love with all these expectations.
“After the first few takes, I was told to scale it back a bit. I guess I went a little bit too far,” he says with a giggle — and this guy giggles a lot in person.
“Breaking Dawn — Part 1” is the “Twilight” film with the wedding, honeymoon and then a half human-half vampire baby on board.
And there is the interference from Taylor Lautner’s Jacob Black, who still has a “thing” for Bella.
“Edward is a bit too open-minded,” Pattinson says. “I’d be like, ‘Don’t be an idiot.’ I’d get rid of this guy. I’d unleash on him — werewolf or not. Personally, I think your girlfriend or wife wants you to lose it and push away the other guy.
“Women like when you confirm ownership. Believe me, no one would dance with my girlfriend if he were her ex. Not happening on my watch.”
After acting a fictional vampire wedding, he isn’t sure he wants big nups of his own. “I did an interview with Kristen,” Pattinson says, “and she got annoyed with me for saying the groom’s role in a wedding is basically to be a prop.”
He has this advice for grooms: “Any guy who tries to get involved in organizing a wedding or even has an opinion is ridiculous.”
He did get very involved during Bella’s horrific birth scene.
“It’s so annoying that this is not an R-rated movie,” Pattinson laments.
“This could have been very ‘Rosemary’s Baby,’ ” he says. “I wanted a little demonic possession. Ideally, Bella would have twins. One good. One evil.”
He says the pivotal moment where Edward bites Bella and turns her into a vampire was movie magic. His first bites don’t work so well, so he chomps her in the neck, the leg, the arms …
“It would have been more fun if I were doing this to Kristen,” he says with a smile. “I was actually biting a rubber dummy of Kristen.
“I was really nervous because it had to be violent, but because it’s ‘Twilight,’ it also had to be a little dreamy. It was great because finally I get to be a vampire for a second and bite someone.”
He is happy to put these “Twilight” years in perspective.
“I came to L.A. at 17 totally unemployed,” he says. “ ‘Twilight’ was like being propelled by a jet through a maze. It still hasn’t slowed down. It’s fun. Totally bizarre. And someday I will figure it all out.
“I didn’t even know if I’d continue acting before this happened. Now, I do have a true drive and passion for it.”
Just not too much passion. The suits are watching.
Source suntimes Via Robsten Dreams
Kristen Interview with Chicago Sun Times
Seeming more relaxed than usual, Kristen Stewart admitted that after being in the intense media spotlight since she first stepped into the role of Bella Swan in the “Twilight” franchise, “I guess I’m feeling a bit more comfortable talking about the work.
“I’m still intensely private about my personal life, but I’ve come to realize people do become very interested in actors as people — especially when you’re lucky enough to be part of something as huge as ‘Twilight.’ ”
That said, Stewart did stress in a Sun-Times interview that she still will “ferociously fight to guard my privacy,” but she added with a sigh, “But I guess that is going to be on ongoing battle.”
Part of that “battle,” of course, is fending off the ongoing reports Stewart and co-star Robert Pattinson are a couple in real life — as well as on the big screen.
While Stewart would not talk about those rumors, she did respond directly when asked if there was anything that would surprise “Twilight” fans about Pattinson — or her other principal co-star, Taylor Lautner.
Laughing about the “Team Jacob” (Lautner) or “Team Edward” (Pattinson) debate among fans of both the Twilight books and the films, Stewart said, “I don’t know if there’s much that would surprise people about Rob, except that he’s probably more fun-loving in private than may come across in public.
“As for Taylor, I think people might be surprised to learn there are so many more layers to him. Yes, he’s a lot of fun and all that, but he’s a lot deeper than I think comes across in the media.”
“The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn — Part 1,” opening Friday, launches us into the two-part finale of the “Twilight” franchise — with the last movie being released next year.
“The biggest change for me in this film was that Bella finally gets to be happy — at least for a bit of time. While clearly she exhibits a lot of bridal jitters tied to the wedding scenes at the beginning of ‘Part 1,’ there’s some genuine joy there for both her and Edward.”
Both “Breaking Dawn” films were shot at once, so “we really had to keep focused over the six months we worked on this,” said Stewart. “In the morning we might film an intense scene from ‘Part 2,’ but then in the afternoon would be something more fun — but from ‘Part 1.’
“We really had to pay attention!”
Stewart loved getting to the part of author Stephenie Meyer’s saga where “Bella showcases so many different sides to her personality and her reality.
“There’s Bella the new bride, then there’s the pregnant Bella, the human Bella, the vampire Bella, it’s really a wild ride.
“But as an actress, it was all so rewarding,” said Stewart, who obviously loved being guided by director Bill Condon through these last two movies.
“He was amazing. I loved working with all of the directors of these films, but Bill is very special and I’m glad he was the one picked to wrap it all up. This was such a huge project, with shooting locations all over the world, amazing special effects and intense scenes to film — and he never once lost his cool.
“I don’t know how he did it.”
Another thing that Stewart enjoyed about filming “Breaking Dawn” was the constant presence of author Meyer, who had joined the project as a producer. “Previously, Stephenie would show up on occasion, but now she was there all the time, and it really helped.
“It made me realize how much I could have been helped by having her on the set for the first three films,” said Stewart. “Just seeing her there almost every day really gave all of us a boost and provided so much inspiration to everyone — the actors, the crew, everyone.”
Asked to weigh in which side of the “Team Jacob” or “Team Edward” side she’s on, she said, “Well, come on. After all, I do marry Edward and become a vampire. Don’t you think that answers that question?”
Source suntimes Via robpattinson Via Robsten Dreams
Rob Interview with Film Ink (Australia)
Currently starring in The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn: Part 1, Robert Pattinson is nearly ready to close the book on the franchise that made him famous.
You're a vampire veteran now? Typecast?
"Edward is such a specific character - a benevolent vampire. I just realised that my fly is undone! I forgot what I was talking about! Umm, I doubt if there's too many ‘nice vampire' scripts out there for me to get typecast."
We get to see you in a swimsuit in the latest film...
"I wear a onesie! I look like an inflatable frankfurter! So much of the books are about Edward's body, and I've managed to avoid taking my shirt off for the whole series, whereas in the book, it's almost every three pages."
The first three movies have been fairly chaste. What about the sex scenes in this?
"There aren't actually any sex scenes in the book. It's all in people's imaginations. That said, we do have to show something on screen, otherwise people will go insane. At the end of the day, watching other people have sex is never going to be that spectacular! It's a strange thing when there's so much hype about it; you're like, ‘God, I hope this lives up to it!'"
Edward and Bella become parents in this film. How do you prepare for fatherhood?
"It's very easy to react to holding a baby that's crying in your hands. You just end up being very careful with it. What's strange is that - two months after she's born - she can speak, and then she's eleven! You just go with it, and it's the ultimate fantasy...well, to some people...you can avoid all the annoying parts of having a kid!"
Like having a dog?!
"Exactly the same thing - you've just got to leave it alone and tell it to go to the toilet outside."
The birth scene sounds very gory?
"It seemed insanely graphic when we were doing it, but it's going to end up PG-13. It was horrible doing it, especially since we did it with a real baby covered in cream cheese and jello. What a horrible introduction to film! This baby is never going to be an actor ever."
Did you have a party - or perhaps a funeral - after the film was all done?
"Yeah, it was nice. On the last day in Canada, there were like 120 people on the last scene, and it was just stressful right up until the last second, and then in the Caribbean, it was just me and Kristen, and we hardly had anything to shoot, so everybody stayed and watched the sunrise."
Do you think that you'll still be as popular once The Twilight Saga is over?
"It's always good to have a bit of hype, but I'd be interested to see how people perceive me in a couple of years, because it seems like people have been talking about the same stuff about me for three years now. I'm wondering how long that will go on for..."
This is an excerpt from a feature in the upcoming December issue of FILMINK which is on sale November 16. For more from Robert Pattinson, be sure to pick up a copy!
Source filmink Via twitter Via Robsten Dreams
Rob and Kristen interviews with LoveFilm
Source lovefilm Via kstweartnews Via Robsten Dreams
Rob Interview with The Scotsman
Robert Pattinson is bewildered by just how famous he is. As the Twilight saga draws to a close, the actor, a curious mix of charm and awkwardness, offers a glimpse into his surreal world
“I was on the 209 bus last week,” I blurt to Robert Pattinson by way of an introduction. He looks wary. It’s fair enough. We’re in Los Angeles, in a room on the 10th floor of the Four Seasons hotel and the 209 is a bus that trundles through south west London. The reason I mention it is because it stops in Barnes, the leafy suburb where Pattinson grew up and where his parents still live. It’s a village, really, quaint and terribly English, peppered with ye olde pubs patronised by older gents in red socks and corduroys, the casual attire of the retired banker. It’s most definitely not Beverly Hills.
“That’s the bus that goes to where my parents live,” he says, looking confused. “And it’s the bus I took to my prep school in Sheen.”
I didn’t mention the 209 to freak Pattinson out, although I’m quickly learning how skittish he is. I wasn’t trying to be quirky, or to ingratiate myself; I was aiming to just say something ordinary, something simple and real, because it’s not difficult to work out that simple and real are not major features of Pattinson’s life. After all, he’s Edward Cullen, brooding vampire hero of the Twilight Saga, the cinematic juggernaut that started in 2008 and, with a release each year since, draws to a close with Breaking Dawn, the first part of which is out this month, followed by the second and final part, already shot but to be released in November 2012.
Before Twilight, Pattinson, 25, was anonymous. Now, there isn’t really anywhere he can go without being recognised. Pie shops in Yorkshire, karaoke bars in Texas – there’s no escape from Edward Cullen and the millions of fans who want their necks nibbled, mothers who’d like their daughters signed (really) or at the very least a photograph to put on Facebook.
It’s the reason Pattinson lives in hotels, to stay one step ahead.
“It’s good to be able to escape,” he says. “But I’ve started to feel recently that having a home would be good. You do kind of lose yourself when you’re living out of bags the whole time. But if I had a home I’d worry about it too much. And I hate spending money. If I could find a house for free that’d be amazing.”
He laughs and then looks serious again. It’s typical Pattinson delivery, a kind of subdued stream of consciousness in which he talks himself in and out of things, then relies on humour to lighten things up, not always convincingly.
“I rented a house in LA last year,” he says. “It was great for ages and then people found out about it and so there were people outside all the time. I had to go away for work and people were going up to it and taking pictures of themselves beside the house. People are crazy.”
You don’t really have to have seen any of the Twilight movies to know what they’re about. Based on Stephenie Meyer’s blockbuster novels, the movies tell the tale of the fated romance between Edward, a 110-year-old vampire who looks forever 17, and Bella (Kristen Stewart) who is human. The first three parts that have been released since 2008 have made nearly $2billion. They’ve also made Pattinson into a global star.
The hotel corridor is dotted with more women with clipboards than I can count. They stand in pairs, marking things down (what I wonder?). Outside the room in which I find Pattinson, sitting in a corner, looking as inconspicuous as a six foot movie star can possibly look, dressed down in jeans and Converse, with a scuzzy looking T-shirt underneath a canvas jacket, there are two burly security guards with inscrutable facial expressions and jackets that are slightly straining at the button.
“There are more organisers here than we have on the set,” Pattinson says. “Having security walking up and down the corridor as if something’s going to happen is freaking me out.”
It’s no wonder he’s nervous. He’s had some dicey experiences. The last time he was in London (promoting Water for Elephants, in which he starred with Reese Witherspoon) he was followed by one particular photographer for the whole week. It was odd, he says, and it got dangerous.
“In America there are loads of people who follow me around at the same time but this was just one guy who was just on me the whole time I was there. He was obsessed. I got in a taxi and he jumped off his motorbike and got in. He just opened the door and jumped in but he had a motorbike helmet on and I literally thought I was going to be assassinated.”
I check to see if he’s joking. He kind of is, but not entirely.
“It was the craziest thing, the weirdest thing that’s ever happened. And the cab driver just drove off because he was so freaked out as well. The guy fell out. It was like an action movie.”
It’s not hard to understand then why Pattinson is circumspect. You would be if you were the subject of an app called “Where’s Robert?”, which details your every move for fans to follow. But there’s something else too. In every interview Pattinson’s ever given, at least as much attention is focused on his meteoric rise to fame and all its trappings as the acting that actually got him there. It’s impossible not to dwell on it, partly because it’s so extreme and partly because he seems so bewildered by it, so genuinely uncomfortable and ill-suited to the whole thing.
The question is: how someone as self-conscious, awkward and self-deprecating has ended up starting his movie career in one massive movie franchise (Pattinson was Cedric Diggory in two Harry Potter films) and the leading man in another?
The way Pattinson tells it, it’s all been a bit of an accident. He started going along to Barnes Theatre Club because his dad told him he’d meet girls there. Then there was a stint as a model (his mum worked for a modelling agency) but he was “rubbish” and didn’t get any jobs. He was 17 when he landed the role of Diggory in The Goblet of Fire after having fallen asleep in the queue outside the audition room. (Being very relaxed seems to work for Pattinson. He took half a Valium before his audition for the first Twilight movie.) There was a slight blip after the Potter films when he landed a role in a play at the Royal Court but was fired before the opening night, but not long after Twilight came along and that was that.
There’s no doubt he feels lucky, if slightly incredulous, that things have worked out the way they have, but he reckons that having “fallen into” his career makes it harder for him to cope with all the scrutiny and attention that goes with his level of fame.
“At least if you’ve been striving for it your whole life then you’ve got that justification – this is what it is and this is what I’ve wanted. Maybe then you wouldn’t feel disillusioned with it. I guess the people who really work for it have this part of their persona which is just ready to go when they become famous. When they walk into a room and everyone turns round they’re like ‘yeah, they should be looking at me’. When I walk into a room and everyone turns round I feel exactly as I did before Twilight, which is like ‘what’s happening? This is weird.’ ”
But surely he must’ve wanted it a bit?
“I wanted something,” he says with a shrug.
Pattinson may be unsuited to being a heartthrob temperamentally, but when it comes to how he looks, it’s a different story. His cheekbones jut from his face in an almost unseemly way. Heavy brows give him a brooding intensity (his looks were described as Byronic by a producer of the first Twilight movie) and his mouth sits in a permanent, natural pout. Vanity Fair dubbed him the most handsome man in the world. How funny then that when Pattinson was announced as Edward Cullen, there was outrage. Fans of the books went crazy – they thought he was too ugly, “repulsive” they shrieked on internet fansites. Then he appeared, all pale and intense and they melted. Actually, that makes them sound a bit too passive. They didn’t melt as much as coalesce into a baying mob who couldn’t get enough of tragic, tortured Edward.
“I guess I got accepted, sort of,” he says squirming. “The reason people like it is because it’s in their imaginations. It means that the performances don’t really matter, it’s more about whether the face looks right. That warrants a certain degree of acceptance, even reluctant acceptance. It’s just a kind of brainwashing.” He laughs nervously.
Pattinson always has an explanation that deflects attention away from him. He takes modesty, ramps it up with inconsistent eye contact, an endless supply of self-effacing anecdotes and an air of utter bafflement that creates a genuine awkwardness. I don’t care about the £12million pay cheque (the amount he’s reportedly earned for the Twilight movies) it’s hard not to sympathise.
But not everyone does. Some people find the awkwardness off-putting. In a group or being interviewed on camera his body language is a study in self-consciousness, he folds himself up as if he’s trying to disappear. His chat can be similarly tricky. He sometimes laughs a little longer than he should and his stories have a tendency to peter out. One to one, he’s more relaxed, but it’s not easy.
And, of course, there’s also resentment. Either people are angered by the popularity of Twilight or they’re annoyed that someone could just stumble into a career like Pattinson’s. Earlier in the day, before I meet him one on one, I overhear a plump Italian journalist with Kevin Keegan curls demand of him, “What happened to your hair?”
It’s true, Pattinson’s hair was looking a bit odd, shaved on one side with long strands on the other. It looked homemade. But, still, the question was rude. And yet Pattinson’s reaction couldn’t have been more meek.
“It was for the last movie [Cosmopolis] I did,” he explained. “I had to have loads of bits randomly cut into so then I was going to shave my head and then I just shaved that bit and decided I kind of liked it.” He shrugged and laughed awkwardly. “I decided to just leave it.”
You’d think at some level Pattinson’s success might have made him a little big headed. In a way, it’s hard not to wish it had. Isn’t that at least part of what being a movie star is about – ego?
Pattinson says he was cockier before Twilight, when he could be who he wanted, say whatever he wanted because no one knew who he was.
“When no one knows who you are you can walk into a room and say anything. You can say you’re the greatest person in the world and no one can say you’re not because they don’t know you. But now they can say ‘I know you, why are you trying to be this? Why are you trying to be that?’ The best thing you can do is stay hidden.”
But how do you stay hidden from 30,000 fans who turn up to hear a 10-minute Q&A as they did at the Olympic Stadium in Munich? Or when you have to appear at Comic-Con and the queues are round the block? I wonder if he feels that people come to see him, or whether they want to see Edward?
“In some ways it helps to think that they’re coming to see Edward. But in other ways it’s saddening. It depends what mood I’m in. It’s a funny thing to see a crowd of people looking at you and knowing that they’re not actually seeing you at all, they’re just seeing whatever it is they imagine you to be.
“You can’t change. You can’t just suddenly decide to be different. I remember coming to LA before and I’d be a totally different person to who I was in London. I always used to look forward to coming over for three months of castings because I could just bullshit the whole time and feel really great about myself even though I wasn’t getting any jobs.” He laughs at the absurdity. “I got to meet all these really interesting people. But now, people have immediate preconceptions about me. I end up having the same conversation a lot. People assume there’s only one talking point.”
Suddenly you start to understand at least a part of the bond between Pattinson and his co-star Stewart: they’re Twilight survivors. Pattinson speaks about Stewart affectionately and he’s clearly full of admiration for her as an actor. Neither of them has ever said a word publicly about whether they are in a relationship despite endless speculation and photographs of them together all over the world. But why would they? Why would they give up something which, so far, they’ve managed to keep for themselves?
It’s a similar story with music. Pattinson is a talented musician and for a while he thought that music might be his career. He had a track on the first Twilight soundtrack. But ask him how it’s going now and he looks like he’d rather pull out his own teeth than talk about it.
“Erm, I’m just writing stuff. I don’t really know. It’s very easy to get labelled. I don’t really know how to go about the music stuff just now.”
Maybe his success as an actor has got in the way?
“Completely,” he says, looking sheepish. “For some reason everyone wants to shit on actors more than anyone else.”
To be fair, there can’t be much time for music. Since Pattinson finished shooting Breaking Dawn, he’s made Cosmopolis with David Cronenberg and Bel Ami, an adaptation of a Guy de Maupassant story of the same name, with Uma Thurman. Didn’t he want to have a break?
“The world moves so quickly now,” he says. “You’ve always got to have stuff lined up. Especially me. Anyone who got big in the last few years, the Twitter age, your shelf life is so short because people’s opinions change so quickly. You’ve got to give constant updates or announcements, even if the movie doesn’t exist, just to have something to announce.
“You’ve got to constantly change people’s perceptions. It’s like, ‘yeah, I’m playing a lesbian robot’ so that people don’t know what to think. If you leave it then it’s like ‘oh, it’s just that guy from Twilight’; it fossilises.”
But the problem for Pattinson is that with the work comes the promotion and even more attention and that’s when things get tricky. There’s no point fighting it, it’s just not his thing.
“The thing I’m most afraid of, because everything is pushing in that direction, is literally just making myself a product. As soon as you start doing Twitter and adverts and straying away what you started out doing and just being a personality, that’s when you get huge money but it’s also when you go crazy.”
Time’s up and to be honest, I almost feel relieved on Pattinson’s behalf. He’s survived another interview and now he can get on with trying to be invisible.
“I’ll think of you the next time I’m on the 209,” I tell him.
“You’ll probably see my mum,” he says. And laughs.
Source scotsman Via twitter Via robpattinson Via Robsten Dreams
A preiview of Robsten's Interview with Top Billing
Via Twitter Via Robsten Dreams
Rob's Interview with Paris Match
Google Translate thanks to Robsten Dreams
Miss, you ask too many questions, "gives me a number of guards deployed in the Four Seasons in Beverly Hills. One does not trifle with the safety of Robert Pattinson, 25, the most revered vampire the next century. I just had time to learn that superstar actor was transferred in secret from another palace in the City of Angels. Standing by the bodyguard, I expect to encounter the wonder of wonders, the teen unattractive to become the idol of millions + Teenagers from the saga "Twilight" and her romance with her partner on the screen and the city Kristen Stewart. This is somewhere, alone, behind closed doors of the corridor to receive following each his journalists. I do not see her. Did they sleep together? It is sin to ask this question! After four years of chastity, the sequel to "Twilight" ("Revelation, Part I") finally brings them together under the same sheets, in a scene to make adults blush.
But off screen, the junior pair income XXL ($ 28 million between them in 2010) plays the card of the sage duo. If they are seen exchanging not even a kiss in public, without their knowledge. So young and so serious! Here is Robert Pattinson who appears in the background. It is late: need a break and fuel - caffeinated soda and sweets - to take the shock of interviews, his martyrdom. Jean worn and greasy hair shaved in places, in battle elsewhere: the Londoner good family nonchalant sex appeal. Between the desire to rebel against the status of "new James Dean," he said usurped, and the pleasure of seduction, his heart balance. At her feet resting on the coffee table, Hollywood: the sign shining through the window under the rays of noon. Soon it may be in Cannes for the new Cronenberg ... He never thought we would take it so seriously. Kristen, she has always known she wants to be an actress, and great. It has character, the thin brown, smaller than him in a head and four years. He, too, but it is English. The knees drawn up toward the body, this great promising teenager does not want to play the VRP and comes out with its humor.
Paris Match. Nice haircut!
Robert Pattinson. Thank you ... [He passes his hand on his head, embarrassed.]
How did this happen?
It was on my last shoot, Cronenberg shot of Don DeLillo, "Cosmopolis." History, for short, a multimillionaire who runs through New York for a haircut ... I was them with scissors ratiboisés anarchic. I no longer looks like nothing, but I did not shave ... that's all! I would have to make me a ridge, I really look too trendy! Just kidding, punk style, it's canon, but I would not play it thoroughly.
After all, you do what you want: you are rich, beautiful and famous!
Are you kidding? Critics terrify me. It's like I see on the screen, I hate it! For example, I do not want to look at my records after each shot. I tend to fix my game to be more to my advantage, and there is no longer film, but the modeling! I prefer to say, "Whatever you do, you're great!" Everything is to be believed.
Not sure about you, is not it?
Oh, no ... well ... OK so I have to work on it.
Self-confidence is not it came with glory? Or is it an attitude?
This success has really taken aback. I wanted to be known, but I never imagined ending up in the life ... how to say ... an idol for young girls. Films for teenagers, it's not my thing. Not that it's my problem, it's just strange to see how the wheel turns.
What fate do you dream then? You hesitate between rapper and pen of a politician ...
I had invested seriously in the report, I saw a music producer. Then I played anti-hero: my roles of "Harry Potter" and "Twilight" were kind weird. I considered also that Edward [Cullen, the vampire he plays in the saga "Twilight"] was a little hilltop. Little did I know he would become so public. I had my dose of romantic characters.
You tried your luck in the modeling, without much success.
I did it for the money. At 14, I was selling newspapers. On the advice of my mother, who worked at a modeling agency, I landed in this environment where we won 600 euros in one day ... In the beginning, which broke out! I was surrounded by beautiful girls, I felt like getting paid to do nothing. Then I ran tons of castings, and harvested twenty refusal for a yes, making me throw on a simple "Hmmmm, no." But the hearings also, I had planted me a thousand times before reaching a result.
"In college, I was just jealous of those who had the guts to go on stage. My real engine, jealousy "
Tired, you almost give up your acting career, just before landing "Twilight" in 2007.
After "Harry Potter", I was rowing, I had the feeling of wasting my time. I went to Los Angeles because I had one more round, and I felt guilty of having obtained any role in America. In four years, Hollywood never wanted me. Normally, after a failure as stinging, your agent lets you down. For some reason, I kept mine. I felt good this time. I was going to play a guitar, it would be cool. But I did the worst audition of my life. Disgusted, I almost did not go to visit the last chance the next day ... It was for "Twilight".
You shot a short film in Britain, and you spend your time between shots, playing the guitar. As before, when you were doing the "horse" in bars. Will you finally sign an album?
I'd love to. I will do it with my friends. But it's hard to get everyone together, and the songs I wrote began to date. To compose new, I would need six months off. I did not.
Are you afraid that the project staff are stamped "CD of the star of 'Twilight'?"
So, too. It's annoying and embarrassing. More importantly, as I am not into the water, I can maintain the myth of Pattinson, the great musician!
Fame Can you destroy?
When you're famous, we sometimes feel very isolated. A force to be observed under the microscope in all its flaws, it collapses.
You've experienced it yourself?
Yes. [He sighs and stands up.] But I have built an alter ego: all these strangers do not talk about me, but that other ... I'm missing.
Are your parents for something in your decision to become an actor?
My father, a vintage car salesman, said it would be fun. Like mother, it has always been an artist full of imagination, but were afraid to come out of her closet. When I was a kid, he went down behind closed doors in the living room at 4 am, Elvis sing in a low voice with my karaoke! But my parents never put pressure me. I cried a lot in their lap, cried out that I hated my job. Their answer was invariably: "Resign if it does not make you happy." You lose the right if your parents say, "All is well, my boy. Go on, you'll end up with the-success. "
You are a great shy. Have you done this job to fight this trait?
Yes. I started in the background: I worked from light to acting classes at the college. But by seeing all the boys to become popular by playing on stage, I wanted the same thing. "I can do better than these guys," I said to myself.
So you chose the film to become a sex symbol?
No, I was just jealous of those who had the guts to go on stage. Jealousy, that's my real engine. In music, too. I often went to see my best friend playing in blues rooms. I see myself still tell his father: "The cow, I'd love to do what he does!" And he answer me: "You know, there are those who can do it, and others." Stomp! Two years later, I had my little concerts, too. Since then, he does not go one day without my thinking about music.
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Robsten Interview with the Austrian M Magazine
Kristen
M: The fairytale finally becomes reality. There will be a dream-wedding between Edward and Bella. How do you like this romantic climax?
It’s fantastic! The first few movies held so much suspense and drama. The big question was: Will Edward and Bella get together or won’t they? If they do, will that relationship have a chance at succeeding? In Breaking Dawn we get the solution for that dilemma. Bella and Edward demonstrate openly that they do belong together, by marrying. Breaking Dawn starts untypically happy and many think this book is the shallowest part of the series. At least at the beginning.
M: With the wedding, Edward’s and Bella’s happy end would be complete. But everything turns out completely differently than one would think.Kristen: Yes. Of course it’d be great to end the whole thing with the wedding just that that would be really cheesy. Most importantly because getting married isn’t really the last sep in a relationship. For Edward and Bella a lot of new problems arise. For the first time they have to solve those problems as a married couple and not, like they used to, as a couple or all by themselves. As shallow as Breaking Dawn starts, as dramatically it resumes. That arc of suspence is amazing. We experience a rollercoaster of emotions, from the greatest happiness, to the bitter end. I think the instensity of those emotions is so real in Breaking Dawn. That’s probably why it’s by far my favorite of the Saga.
M: How did you feel in the wedding dress?Kristen: My weddingdress is a classic dream. Although weddings are nothing I spend much thought on I have to say I was surprised. The wedding dress is breathtakingly beautiful and at the same time graceful. It just underlines the whole nostalgic aspect of this ceremony. You feel the seriousness. At least that’s how I felt.
M: Did you have a say in the design?Kristen: The wedding dress was chosen by a committee. There were a few minor changes, that I insisted upon, but I don’t wanna share what they were.
M: Bella says in Breaking Dawn that, “Marriage is just a piece of paper.” What are your thoughts on that?Kristen: I’m not really keen on marrying, what doesn’t mean that I disapprove of marriage. It’s just, at the moment, not of importance to me. Wedding and marriage, that is of different importance of everyone. I think that ones point of view on that subject has a lot to do with how one grew up. Marriage can convey something beautiful, but I don’t think that a piece of paper can’t create a bond between two people. I believe that love doesn’t need a formal act, no official confirmation that you love and are loved. What I, myself, can totally imagine is being with someone till the end.
M: Bella and Edward experience their first, great love. How much do you think does one’s first love shape someone?Kristen: I’d like that answer questioned by Stephenie Meyer. I’d like to know if she described that first love unconsciously that way or if she used it consciously. It’s probably impossible to answer that, especially ever since Twilight became that popular and everyone has something to say about it. To answer the question anyway: I think the whole significance lies in the fact that everyone is convinced that their first love was the greatest in the world. Even more, that something like that hasn’t happened before. But in fact, you just haven’t ever felt anything comparable. Additionally, like it was with Edward and Bella, that first love often starts secretly. The bond exists between the two lovers only. Only the two of them know of that secret. That is the “special something” that, in further consequence, only strengthens the feelings.
M: Twilight is popculture. How do you think about the personal influence Twilight has on people?Kristen: I think Twilight will be one of those movies that people won’t forget all their life. I hope that Twilight will be more than a vampire movie in the end, but the movie of a strong, female heroine. We get to know Bella as a pragmatic student. A girl, that, in the beginning, doesn’t make the impression that she’ll take central part in this lovestory. Not until the last part, when Bella talks about her experiences, do we get to know a woman that throws caution to the wind.
M: Not Edward or Jacob are the heros, but Bella. What, for you, makes someone a hero?Kristen: A hero, in my opinion, is someone that is driven by some kind of idea of a better world. But not because of some narcistic self-interest, but because for him or her the ultimate good is the goal. A hero achieves, what an ordinary mortal can’t.
M: Do you know someone that fits that description?Kristen: Taylor Lautern. I don’t know anyone that is that rational and still so passionate. Would Taylor get into a situation like that: He’d be the cliché version of a hero.
M: Between Edward and Jacob and the Cullens and the Volturi there’s a huge conflict because of Bella. We intially talked about marriage and that it’s not always blissful.
Kristen: Exactly. The conflict arises because of the pregnancy. Edward wants an abortion, Bella wants to keep the baby. Bella said from the start on that she’s ready to give her life in order to save that of her child and she’s even ready for suicide. That total devotion is really cool. During that time we also see Edward’s and Bella’s darker side. While she becomes emotionally vulnerable, he gets angrier.
M: How hard was it for you to relate to all those milestones in Bella’s life?Kristen: I did my best. I studied every aspect and interpreted every point of view. As an actor I was, on the one hand, looking forward to it, on the other hand it really is very intimidating to have to portray the intensity of those feelings. What I learned was to try and play the part realistically and faithful to reality. A lot I had to ignore, especially the fact that millions of people will see Breaking Dawn in theatres.
M: Do you feel more pressure because of the success of the series?Kristen: Yes. During the last four years the expectations rose. The pressure increased with every movie that came out. That’s a lot of pressure piles up… [laughs]
M: And how do you feel, now that Twilight is finished?Kristen: Good. First of all because four years is a long time and it’s kind of cool to see the end of it all. Secondly, I think that each and every Twilight movie is good on its own and that the whole series is a masterpiece.
M: Is there something you’ll miss?Kristen: Lots. Something like Twilight, that’s every actor’s dream. That happens rarely. What I’m not gonna miss is my colleagues. I shouldn’t talk that much but it’s the truth. We spent so much time together, especially while shooting this and the next movie, that I don’t have a bad conscience when I say that I won’t miss them and it’s good as it is.
M: What question have you refering to the end, been asked the most?Kristen: Two questions: How do I feel now that it’s over and the second one is in regards to the love scene [it says “my favourite scene” in the german version but I’m just gonna say that that’s an error in translation]. That’s what the journalists as well as the fans want to know the most.
M: And the questions about the vampire baby?Kristen: Oh, those as well of course. Personally, I don’t think that this pregnany is as crazy as it is often portrayed. It fits perfectly into the plot.
M: One thing about your next movie we know well: the forrest. Because you’ll be playing Snow White und as we know, Snow white lives behind the seven mountains.Kristen: If you look at it like that, that’s true. Well, maybe there aren’t that many differences between Bella and Snow White. Both are women, that aren’t afraid of anything. At least they choose what they’re afraid of. None of those two makes that decision consciously, it’s more unconsciously and instinctive. Maybe it’s because they tell themselves, “it’s not that bad.” What’s also true is that both Bella and Snow White are the type of women that can channel their fear onto something positive. They are true heroines.
M: And how was the mood?Robert: In Canada we were 120 actors on set, on the last day of shooting. In the Carribean it was just Kristen and I. We finally did all the stuff we couldn’t do during shooting. Sitting by the sea while the sun sets – it was just beautiful, to end it like that.
Via fiercebitchstew| Via gossip-dance
M: Kristen claims that she isn’t sad that Twilight is over. Do you share her opinion?Robert: I don’t know. Because we’re constantly promoting the movie and talking about Twilight, everything is still really present for me. Please ask me after the second part has been released, because that’s when Twilight really is over.
Robert Pattinson: Sex for the first time
M: After hearing from Kristen how she felt about the end of the Saga, the unavoidable question also for you: How did you feel on the last day of shooting?
Robert: To be honest, that day was miserable. We’d been shooting for two weeks, in Canada, in the cold. Then again, the last day in St. Thomas in the Carribean was an absolute dream. That was the only time we were shooting in bright sunset. That was really our really last day of shooting. We shot on the beach and went into the ocean – yeah, that was amazing… [lacht]
M: And how was the mood?
Robert: In Canada we were 120 actors on set, on the last day of shooting. In the Carribean it was just Kristen and I. We finally did all the stuff we couldn’t do during shooting. Sitting by the sea while the sun sets – it was just beautiful, to end it like that.
M: Kristen claims that she isn’t sad that Twilight is over. Do you share her opinion?
Robert: I don’t know. Because we’re constantly promoting the movie and talking about Twilight, everything is still really present for me. Please ask me after the second part has been released, because that’s when Twilight really is over.
M: How do you deal with the hype?
Robert: A little hype doesn’t harm anyone, especially nowadays. I’m more interested in how long the hype will last, to be honest. How will people perceive me a few years from now?
M: How do you see your influence as an element of popculture?
Robert: There certainly is an influence. The amount of vampire movies that came into being after Twilight… that’s how you see that it’s a real phenomenon. None of us ever saw the magnitude Twilight would have coming. The influence on the popculture, the last thing that had such an influence was Harry Potter. The special thing is that, especially in the last books of Twilight, we see the wedding, the honeymoon, the pregnancy and birth in the perspective of a woman.
M: How did you deal with the shooting of the birthing scene?
Robert: That scene was extremely difficult. The movie is PG-13 and the restrictions for that are very strict. No blood can be shown. The birth in the book is described very explicitly though. The shooting was bizarre, I can’t think of a better description for it. We used ice, cottage cheese and jello – it was disgusting. The baby was just a few weeks old and had to fight its way through that thing, that represented the placenta. It was gross and I just thought, what a horrible introduction into the world of acting. I don’t think the baby will ever want to be an actor.
M: We also see how differently men and women deal with these kinds of problems and situations.
Robert: Absolutely. We have sex for the first time, and the consequence is a pregnancy, which Edward wasn’t expecting at all. Additionally to that, Edward does look like a young man but he’s probably 105 years old. He hates himself for not thinking for even one single moment that Bella could get pregnant when he sleeps with her. Edward thinks that he poisoned the person he loves more than anything on this world with his thoughtlessness. That fear and that hate directed towards himself are understandable.
M: How did Twilight’s success change you?
Robert: I became an actor coincidentally. I kinda stumbled into it. That’s why, at first, it was more of a experimenting and learning experience. I didn’t have a clue where I’d find myself at the end of the movie. You don’t learn your job overnight and you don’t wake up, being a pro.
M: Were you scared that you’d be remembered as Edward only?
Robert: Yes, of course. But I came to terms with it when I said, I did well as Edward but that’s over now. All I can do is continue to experiment with roles and that’s cool.
Source robsteners Via strictlyrobsten Via robpattinson Via Robdsten Dreams
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