Robert Pattinson | Page 987 | the Fashion Spot

Robert Pattinson

A brilliant interview with The Guardian.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/nov/06/robert-pattinson-interview-reality-bites
When asked about the pressures of fame, Emma Watson (Hermione in the Harry Potter series) said she was thankful she wasn't Robert Pattinson. "I can't even imagine what that kind of fame must be like," she said. "So many people must wish they were in his position and think he has the best life, but actually there are prices you pay. Don't interpret that from my perspective. It's not so bad for me. I'm not in Rob's position: I don't have people screaming and crying and clawing at me. I'm so grateful for that."

It says something when the star of Harry Potter thinks that you're the one who's too famous. But Pattinson – aka R Patz – seems to have taken it in his stride. He greets the screaming hordes with humour and charm and a willingness to pose for pictures. There have been no drugs or fights with paparazzi. Even the romance he struck up with Twilight co-star Kristen Stewart two years ago has survived breathless coverage in the gossip magazines, a testament to the 25-year-old's sangfroid.

So today ought to be a breeze. He's at the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills to talk about Breaking Dawn – Part 1, the fourth instalment of the Twilight franchise that has been his life for the past four years. When he shows up, however, he's a mess. His famous hair is ungroomed and his T-shirt has a gaping hole all down one side. It's not even a fashionable tear – the stitching has just gone. He looks as though he's just been mobbed by a gang of rabid Twihards.

Happily, Pattinson doesn't seem to care. In the twilight years of the Twilight juggernaut, his thoughts have turned to what life might be like afterwards. "It's like being compared to people who've been in massive movies who just sort of disappear afterwards, even though they probably had incredibly fulfilling and successful lives," he says, nibbling on a fingernail. "Like Luke Skywalker." He scratches his head. "What the ****'s his name?"

Mark Hamill.

"Yes! People are like: 'Oh, the Mark Hamill curse.' And poor Mark Hamill. Jesus Christ." He tilts back in the chair and laughs, apparently oblivious to the state of his T-shirt. "I mean, I'm sure he did fine."

It's easy to forget that this charming shambles of a man commands at least $12m a movie. The cheekbones are a clue, but his eyes seem further apart than you expect – it's a model's face, more attractive in 2D. And Pattinson doesn't have any swagger or strut about him. As tall as he is, he doesn't impose. His body language is loose, approachable, self-effacing. He's not at the summit admiring the view so much as peering down and hoping he doesn't fall off. "I think of impending doom all the time," he says with a shrug.

This apocalyptic fear stems from the way his career started. One minute he was a complete unknown. And then, out of a clear blue sky, Twilight happened, and he turned into Elvis. Girls on every continent went bananas, as did their mothers. In 2010 Time magazine declared Pattinson one of the World's Most Influential People. And now the end is nigh.

Breaking Dawn is the last book of the series, but Summit Entertainment, determined to milk the fans down to their last shrieking dollar, has pulled the Harry Potter trick and split it into two parts (the second instalment comes out next year). How they manage to get two movies out of the final book will be interesting to see. The plot of Breaking Dawn, in which the vampire-human romance between Edward [Pattinson] and Bella [Stewart] finally reaches the marriage altar, doesn't offer quite the all-out action climax of, say, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

"In career terms Twilight was like a security blanket," Pattinson continues. Then he furrows his brow for a moment and corrects himself. "Not a blanket – a safety net. I had a three- or four-month window between each one during which I could do another job. But whatever I did I knew that I'd have another Twilight movie on the way, which is theoretically guaranteed to make a lot of money. So I could always afford to fail."

Now the net is gone. The stakes have been raised. He once described choosing roles as "crippling".

"After the last one comes out, you can kind of have two failures – and they'd better be low-budget failures. Because if you have one big-budget failure you're pretty much done in this environment."

It's an odd thing to say, given the circumstances. After all, he's the second-richest actor in Britain behind Daniel Radcliffe, with a fortune of some £32m. He's an international sex symbol who need never work again, yet he's leading the charge of a young Hollywood Brit pack that includes Andrew Garfield, Tom Sturridge, Henry Cavill and Alex Pettyfer. If there's anyone who should not be nervous about the future, it's Robert Pattinson. And yet he is.

"It's different for Kristen, for example," he continues, warming to his theme. "She doesn't think about it like that at all, because she grew up gradually, doing independent movies and stepping up the ladder, whereas I was doing progressively smaller movies in England, after Harry Potter… to the point where I was doing nine-day shoots for, like, 20p and a packet of Space Invaders. And then this happened. So I'm not just another actor who's around and jobbing. When you hire me for a job, you're hiring…"

Twilight guy?

"Yeah. I'm now this 'thing' that's supposed to be something. And if you then don't fulfil that expectation, what the **** are you?"

It's a fair QUESTION. In some respects, he's just a nice middle-class boy from a vaguely bohemian household in Barnes, west London. His father imported vintage cars from America and his mother was a booker at a model agency. He had two older sisters, who would dress him up as a doll and call him Claudia (Pattinson has always been subject to the madness of young girls). He started modelling at the age of 12, putting those cheekbones to use – shortly after he was expelled from school for being a bit of a truant. But Pattinson never thought of acting back then. His passion was music, and still is. Those scenes in Twilight where he's playing the piano? They're actually Pattinson's hands.

Then his father persuaded him to join the local amateur dramatic society. A casting agent happened to see him in a production of Tess of the D'Urbervilles, and before long he was screen testing as Reese Witherspoon's son in Vanity Fair (the scenes never made it into the movie). Pattinson, however, wanted to finish school and go to university to do a degree in international relations – he'd toyed with the idea of becoming a political speechwriter – until he landed the part of Cedric Diggory in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, which came out in 2005.

It was a huge break in a global movie franchise, but even though he shone in the role, it didn't pave the way for better things: the parts he was offered afterwards were smaller; his career went into reverse. There were a few minor indies and made-for-TV features – a shell-shocked war pilot in The Haunted Airman and a depressed musician in How To Be, not to mention an abysmal Catherine Tate vehicle, The Bad Mother's Handbook, in which the future Sexiest Man in the Cosmos tried to pass himself off as a nerd in bottle glasses and tank tops.

By now Pattinson was living with a friend in Soho, and a career in music had started to seem more likely. He had a rock band called Bad Girls, then started playing solo acoustic guitar gigs under the stage name Bobby Dupea. When he did fly out to LA, to give Hollywood a shot, he spent his days playing music in bars or going to the movies; his agent, Stephanie Ritz, let him sleep on her couch. He felt bad that Ritz had represented him for three years but he'd never nailed an audition. Then the part of Edward Cullen came up. Director Catherine Hardwicke was having a hard time filling the role. She'd tried Orlando Bloom and Hayden Christiansen. She liked Henry Cavill for the role, but he looked too old. She'd auditioned 5,000 boys for the part before Pattinson.

"The audition was at Catherine's house in Venice," he recalls of the moment that was to change his life, and his lifestyle, forever – which involved messing about on Catherine's bed with Kristen, to see if they had any chemistry. "It was me, her and Kristen, and her assistant videotaping it. I was the last one of the day and I was in there for four hours, which was longer than anyone else before me. So I kind of knew. I was like: 'Hmmm, something's happened.'

"And it was the first time I'd ever sent an email afterwards, as well. Like: 'I had a really great experience in the audition.' You know, kissing the director's ****. I always thought that was, like, the cheesiest, most pathetic thing to do. But it worked!"

Apparently he had the X-factor Hardwicke was looking for: as far as Pattinson was concerned, that X stood for Xanax. "I'd never had a Xanax before," he says, looking guilty for a moment. "But I'd started getting so paranoid about messing up auditions all the time that I would actually mess them up. So I took like half a Xanax. And it went really well, so when I had to go and meet the producers I thought: I'm just going to take another Xanax!" He laughs and rocks his chair. "And then I went in and almost fell asleep."

The producers were not impressed. They thought Pattinson looked scruffy and too old for the part. But Hardwicke pleaded and got him another meeting – this time minus the pharmaceuticals.

"I shaved, like, 50 times before I showed up," says Pattinson. "I made myself look all neat and tidy, wearing a white crew-neck T-shirt. It was almost not to be. Not a single person wanted me at that thing, only Catherine and Kristen."

He's said that he expected Twilight to be a "really serious" indie film – "I had no idea it was going to be this big thing you'd get on Burger King hats" – and as well as mass acclaim, it has, of course, had its critics. (A quote attributed to Stephen King says it best: "Harry Potter is about confronting fears, finding strength and doing what is right in the face of adversity. Twilight is about how important it is to have a boyfriend.") But you suspect that Pattinson recognised the limits of Twilight long ago. The director of Breaking Dawn, Bill Condon, describes him as supersmart: "That's the first thing you notice. He's very thoughtful and analytical. And he's a cineaste, you know? He loves a lot of genres and actors, so he seems like someone who can't wait to go explore."

His choice of roles in the past year bears this out. In May he starred in the Depression-era romance Water for Elephants, as a dashing vet who joins a circus after his parents die. Next year he'll appear in an adaptation of Guy de Maupassant's Bel Ami, which will involve him being a thoroughly bad egg and sleeping with Christina Ricci, Uma Thurman and Kristin Scott Thomas. And then there's David Cronenberg's adaptation of the Don Delillo novel Cosmopolis, a Joycean story about a cheating Manhattan billionaire who loses his fortune in a single day. He has described the script as "insane and difficult"; the cast includes Samantha Morton, Paul Giamatti and Juliette Binoche. It's the big league, by any standard. More the choice of an actor seeking a challenge than a pretty boy looking for safe harbour.

"I think he's made really smart choices," says Twilight producer Wyck Godfrey. "He has a deep desire to earn the status he has, and those films both have hardcore directors and quality material. I think it speaks more to who Rob is than the Twilight series, because he comes from a literary background. He shows up to set reading Molière."

Godfrey has also seen Pattinson's "crafty and determined" side. During one typically crazed week he had to shoot two days on Water for Elephants prior to the Golden Globes and then return to shooting Twilight. The trouble was, his hair needed to be a lot shorter for Water for Elephants. "I said, you're going to need a hairpiece [for the 1930s film]," says Godfrey. "You can't come back with completely different hair. And both he and his agent said: 'OK, I get it.' But then he had it cut short anyway. And when he saw me, he said: 'Oh my gosh, I don't know what happened!' It was pretty infuriating, but it tells you about the kind of dedication he brings to the movies he works on."

He inspires affection and admiration among co-stars, who marvel at the way he has handled his sudden superstardom. "He comes to set with no expectations or attitude," Ricci said after shooting Bel Ami, "none of those things you worry someone of his level of fame is going to have." Michael Sheen, who stars with him in the Twilight movies, has offered the avuncular verdict that he "seems to have a good head on his shoulders".

Pattinson has always said he admires Leonardo DiCaprio's career – he's even asked DiCaprio for advice on career longevity. At the Four Seasons, his eyes remain fixed on that horizon. "If I do decide one day to stop acting, I just hate the idea of people going: 'Oh, did you ever do anything else besides that Twilight thing?'"
 
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Thank You

___________________________

@ Twi-Con 2011
lots more at the source





robsessedpattinson.com
 
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He definitely is dressing a lot better. It's like a mixture of late 2008 and early 2009 which were his best casual style years and I think he's getting back up to that level now.
 
I agree ! I can finally really come back on this thread. Maybe since twilight is finally over he realised he couldn't be dressing as an hobo anymore since his safety blanket is gone. The guardian article was indeed interesting. However I don't necessarly agree with his idea of how he needs to really make 1 next very high budget project and succeed in order to be trusted. If he does one very powerful indie movie with a great story and a very challenging role acclaimed by the critics he will be more than fine.
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Ammarra- I agree. A successful and critically acclaimed indie role will be just as good for his image. I'm very interested to see how Bel Ami goes if/when it gets released. Cosmopolis next year too.

Rob's hair is also looking good at the moment. Hair, clothes and stubble are all working pretty darn well together!
 
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I love that he can look this sexy



or this goofy LOL



Thanks for the links, Chloe. IA he´s been looking great lately, gives me hope for the future -style wise- :)



robpattinson.blogspot.com
 
Brilliant translated article on Cosmopolis! The footage and Cronenberg, Sarah Gadon, and Paul Giamatti talking about it yesterday has really has got me psyched for it.

On the week when David Cronenberg visits Portugal - he presents his last movie "A Dangerous Method" - Expresso releases a report done on the last day of shooting for his next movie "Cosmopolis". Robert Pattinson is the lead in the 1st transatlantic production for Paulo Branco. The screen adaptation for the Don DeLilo novel, shot in Toronto between May and July, and arrives in theatres in 2012.

We arrive to Canada on July 11th, at the time when the Cosmopolis team just left the Pinewood Toronto Studios, where most of the movie was shot, to install itself on another compound. Mission: to accompany the last days (in fact they were the latest 24 hours) of shooting for Cronenberg's new movie. We're going to watch the last scenes of the movie that correspond to the last chapter in the book. Eric Michael Packer (Robert Pattinson), the lead character and Benno Levin (Paul Giamatti) the man who will finish it all have a decisive dialogue. Pattinson, a now mega-star due to his participation in the Twilight Saga. is working for the first time with this director. His character, Eric is a Manhattan golden boy. 20 years old. Stock market broker who has made a lot of money. On that morning of traffic jams, he decides to cross New York in his limo to get a haircut. Addicted to the logic power that runs the American empire, confident on his excess of confidence (?), he decided to bet everything against the valorisation of the yen. In the 24 hours in which the Don DeLilo novel runs Eric will lose his whole fortune. Haunted by real enemies and by the ghost of his own end e goes on a descent to Hell: is condemnation is irreversible.

Cronenberg lost no time in transforming this story in which finances dictate the death of the ego, as the narrative progresses it takes the nature of a hallucination. We are in "cronenberguian" terrain by excellence. The owner of the rights for the Don DeLilo piece, it was producer Paulo Branco who suggested this movie to the Canadian moviemaker. Branco occupied himself with the financial building of his most ambitious project to date, and his first North-American experience, in this French-Canadian production that cost 20 million dollars. When we arrived in Canada, names like Sarah Gadon, Samantha Morton, Kevin Durand, Juliette Binoche, Jay Baruchel and Mathieu Amaric have already passed by the Cosmopolis set...Pattinson and Giamatti were the ones who stayed for the grand finale.

Tuesday, July 12th. At 10am in the morning we pass by Giamatti in the hotel lobby in downtown Toronto. Walter Gasparovic, first director's assistant for Cronenberg welcomes us half an hour later, somewhere in the city's suburbs. Gasparovic has been working with Cronenberg since "eXistenZ" (1999). He's part of a very loyal team that makes this shooting look like a family gathering. We get in on a studio department that's no less that then thousand square metres. Parked outside are 20 trucks that support the cast and the technical teams (and as many for the next door studio where they're currently shooting a "Total Recall" remake with Colin Farrel, but with no Verhoeven or Schwarzenegger). We should not think a movie is measured in how many trucks are outside, and if it does impress, let it be known that for a production like this the "apparatus" is only required for minimal services.

Inside the studio, Arvinder Grewal, artistic director, has built the last décor of the movie: the room in that dirty, dark building where Eric ends up at the end of the book - reflective of his state of mind. In this moment, Eric is already a destroyed man fighting his biggest enemy: himself. On the set is also the Polish photography director, Peter Suschitzky who's been working with Cronenberg since "Dead Ringers" (1988) - in their own way, they're inseparable too. In charge of the sound mixture is the experienced Jean-Paul Mugel. Also there are Ron Hewitt, head chief for the artistic department, Dug Rotstein, script supervisor (another "cronenberguian" who's been with him for more than 20 years now), Denise Cronenberg, who's been doing costumes for her brother's movies since "The Fly" and, Caitlin Cronenberg, David's daughter, a plastic artist who's here as a set photographer and is the only person on studio allowed to carry a camera. That's not to be thought of as strange, weeks before Pattinson was caught by paparazzi during an outside shoot (these photos would then appear all over the Internet). Caitlin is, therefore, the author of all the photos in these pages, which are being seen for the first time.
Our presence is noted. We appear at the end of a shoot that, until now, had not welcomed any press visits. Doing a report in this case is a thing to manage very carefully, a word too many and it might seem abusive. We're not allowed in the bit of the set where they're about to film. We have the script in our hands. They offer us chairs in privileged positions for the third monitor, the one that belongs to Jasper Vrakking, responsible for the digital treatment of image. The second monitor is occupied by Dug Rotstein. At the first is, obviously, Suschitzky. When Cronenberg's on set, in front of the actors, he rarely ever looks at the monitors. He works, as always, with only one camera: he's part of that moviemaker family that allows only one point of view.

When we get in the studio we see the white limo (a Lincoln) in which Eric Packer starts the movie. They explain to us that the adapted scrip was absolutely loyal to the original's dialogues. Also here are remains from other décor: the yellowed barbershop Eric decided to visit, it reminds us of "Naked Lunch" (1991). It's now 10:50 pm. Pattinson and Giamatti aren't at the studio yet. In their places are two body doubles dresses exactly like the characters, Eric (in a black suit) and Benno (with a towel on his head), it's with them that the technical team makes the last preparations for the shoot. Cronenberg arrives shortly after, we are introduced, he shakes our hands with a "make yourself at home" and a "you don't work for "News of the World, right?" (the scandal about illegalities in the British newspaper had broken just days ago). He's the friendly person who we had met before and who we met again two months later at the Venice Festival for an interview on "A Dangerous Method". As for Pattinson and Giamatti, they're only allowed inside when everything is ready to go.

That's what happens at 12:15pm. Pattinson and Giamatti arrive on set. It's all very fast, there's no time to lose. 3 minutes later, absolute silence. The bell that "shuts everyone up" rings and the camera starts rolling, Cronenberg scream "action", it's the first take of the day: a dialogue drenched in humour and derision between Eric and Benno. Eric says: "You're upset because you feel like you don't have a role to play, there's no place for you. But you have to question yourself: who's to blame?" The 1st take goes all the way to the end but Cronenberg is not happy. The same with the second that fails: Giamatti bursts out laughing. Suschitzky measures the lighting again. It's his first time working with an Alexa, the latest digital camera from Arriflex; arrived on the market in 2010 (it was the high tech response to the Red One by Canon). The third take starts: goes all the way to the end, all seems well. Cronenberg asks for a fourth that fails again. On the fifth, Giamatti explodes on a sentence previously quietly said: "I wanna be known as Benno!" Nobody expected that reaction, almost a scream, not even Cronenberg. Silence. Everything's done, that take is the one that will make it. Suschitzky and Mugel do an OK sign.

At 1pm Cronenberg gives Pattinson and Giamatti indications for the next shot. He speaks to them about "Sleuth: Autopsy of a Crime" because, just like in the last Mickiewicz’s movie, it will be necessary to do the next dialogue in one single long take, no cuts. We make good on that time by asking Mugel what's the sound design for the set, he explains us that he has four open ways, one mic on Pattinson's lapel, another one on Giamatti and two others on "perches". Cronenberg is following the chronology of the argument (and the book) and filming in sequence, like Eustache used to do, like Garrel does. He gets ready to shoot a central scene in the movie in which Eric/Pattinson shoots himself in the hand in front of Benno (like DeLilo wrote, "Eric didn't know if he was suffering.") The body doubles get back on set and the actors disappear. They come back at 2:15pm for the first take. Pattinson ends the scene by simulating the shot (and the pain). The tech for the Mr. X. company, in charge with the special effects is paying attention, later he will "add" blood to Eric's hand and the sound of the gun going off in post-production.

2:40pm: the next scene is prepared, a shorter one this time. The long final dialogue for "Cosmopolis" between Eric and Benno still has a few pages to go. Giamatti adds to this scene a new dose of emotion. "That's where the answer was, in your body, in your prostate." Eric, just like Benno, who will be his executioner, has an asymmetric prostate and what he metaphorically means is "the importance of asymmetries, of skewed objects", since Eric has already condemned himself, it was for blindly believing in the contrary: perfection. Cronenberg does two takes. Told like this, it seems that making movies is easy.

At 4pm, lunch break. Cronenberg tells us about the immense surprise of working with Pattinson. Of how this role can potentially change the young British actor's career. An hour and a half later it's back to work. The team is relaxed: they're one week ahead of the predicted shooting schedule. Walter Gasparovic, in front of his monitor, looks in the rushes for the exact moment when Eric's gun fell on set to avoid a fake continuity mistake ("the Internet falls on us if we fail at this"). After that Cronenberg smilingly informs us that he decided to shoot the last part in one single shot, but that implies, by a question of focus and depth of field, they have to intensify the lighting on set. Suschitzky doesn't hesitate: "Let's knock down some walls." It's the most important technical challenge of the day.

8:50pm, Cronenberg finally prepares to shoot the scene. The dialogue is very intense and it's going to take about 4 minutes with no cuts. "I still need to shoot you..." starts Benno. The first take fails. On the second one, Paul Giamatti goes almost to the end but breaks: his part is long and hard. Everyone's mesmerized by the monitors, it's a heavy moment and not a fly is heard on set. The third take goes even worse. The fourth is a success but Cronenberg is still not completely happy with Pattinson's conclusion: the finale of DeLilo's book is a cosa mentale, reflexive and distant; it transports itself into a twilight zone that goes way beyond the simple extermination of the lead character. It's not easy to enclose a suggestion on a cinema plan. The fifth take is started. Cronenberg says go. Benno goes around a table and points a gun at Eric. "As it is, you're already dead. You're like someone that has died already, a hundred years ago, many centuries ago (...) I wanted you to save me." Robert Pattinson closes his eyes like he's never done before. He stays like that for a few seconds. High tension moment. He opens his eyes. Cronenberg yells "cut". It's a genius take, you can feel it in the air. For a moment, the team was suspended one foot above ground and now they exhale in relief. This is certainly the take that will make it to the movie theatres, sometime in 2012. The filming is done. On our way out of the studio, 11pm in Toronto, we meet Cronenberg again: "You know I could not cut that take while Robert had his eyes closed. I had to wait for him to open them. I could have waited forever. Grand maître. [The big master.]"
http://robpattinson.blogspot.com/2011/11/new-cosmopolis-stills.html#more
 
such a good article, thank you! :D
i like Cronenberg's apparent enthusiasm for Rob.
 
"You know I could not cut that take while Robert had his eyes closed. I had to wait for him to open them. I could have waited forever. Grand maître. [The big master.]"

looooove it.
 
Thanks Pixie for the article :) Very detailed and in depth, definitely a good read. Very nice words for Rob from Cronenberg.
 
The writer didn´t mention if Rob messed any scenes, only Paul... I wonder if that´s because he didn´t mess it up or they´re biased or something...
I can´t wait to see this movie, a trailer at least.
 

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