Showing posts with label Press Junket. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Press Junket. Show all posts

VIDEOS: More press junket footage of Robert Pattinson talking about bodies and babies aka High Life!

VIDEOS: More press junket footage of Robert Pattinson talking about bodies and babies aka High Life!

Sam's baby :)



Another Great Pic of Robert Pattinson At The Press Junket For 'High Life' At TIFF

Another Great Pic of Robert Pattinson At The Press Junket For 'High Life' At TIFF


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NEW Photos Of Robert Pattinson & Josh Safdie Doing Press In London For 'Good Time' (Oct 6th)

NEW Photos Of Robert Pattinson & Josh Safdie Doing Press In London For 'Good Time' (Oct 6th)

Rob & Josh were busy yesterday doing press following Good Times screening at the BFI the night before. Can't wait to hear/see/read the interviews when they come out.



A post shared by Sian Watson (@sianwatson) on

Robert Pattinson Talks To The Boston Globe About The Safdie Brothers, His Good Time Character & More

Robert Pattinson Talks To The Boston Globe About The Safdie Brothers, His Good Time Character & More

Meredith Goldstein from the Boston Globe interviewed Robert Pattinson & The Safdies recently.

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Here are the parts of the interview where she spoke to Rob:

"Just before an interview with the Safdie brothers – the filmmakers behind the gritty crime-thriller “Good Time” – a reporter gets a warning: “They like to talk.”
(.......)

Their “Good Time” star Robert Pattinson calls this trait an “abundance of energy.”
“It’s just that, from Day 1, Minute 1 of the day until wrap,” he said. “Just always at maximum.”
(.....)

The project came out of a meeting with Pattinson, who told us in a phone interview that he was drawn to the “frenetic, frenzied energy” of the brothers’ work.
(.....)

Pattinson said he feels lucky to have worked with them when he did.

“I could really see that people around hadn’t really noticed the extent of their potential when I first met them,” he said. “You can feel that they had — that they still have a lot inside them people haven’t really seen yet.”
Meredith also tweeted out some extra tidbits from Rob that are not included in the article:









CLICK HERE to read the full interview

Robert Pattinson Talks To The LATimes About What's On His DVD Shelf, Working With Claire Denis & MORE

 Robert Pattinson Talks To The LATimes About What's On His DVD Shelf, Working With Claire Denis & MORE

Great interview with Rob by the LA Times where he talks about working with his favourite directors, starting work on High Life & lots more. Get comfy and have a read.....

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With the release of “The Lost City of Z” and “Good Time,” 2017 may well be remembered as the year Robert Pattinson officially became a critics’ darling.

Some might claim the shift began in 2012, when the British actor, still best known for setting hearts aflutter in the “Twilight” movies, drew raves for his change-of-pace performance in David Cronenberg’s art-house chiller “Cosmopolis.” Since then Pattinson has reteamed with Cronenberg on “Maps to the Stars,” done further career-redefining work in David Michôd’s dystopian thriller “The Rover,” and earned plaudits for his appearances in films including Werner Herzog’s “Queen of the Desert” and Anton Corbijn’s “Life.”

But his versatility has never been on such dazzling display as it has this year, first with his shrewdly underplayed supporting role as the real-life Amazon explorer Henry Costin in James Gray’s “The Lost City of Z.” He followed that with his arrestingly deglamorized star turn as an amateur bank robber in Josh and Benny Safdie’s thriller “Good Time,” which opened in theaters Friday.

The steady accumulation of prestigious world-cinema names on Pattinson’s résumé represents the fulfillment of a dream that took root during his teenage years. Well before “Twilight” sent him into the celebrity stratosphere, Pattinson says, he was an obsessive film buff with a particular passion for French art cinema. Even critics who have been slow to appreciate the actor’s talent (guilty as charged) would likely approve of his taste, which has steered him toward favorites as different as Jean-Luc Godard, Leos Carax, Claire Denis and Herzog.

This month, Pattinson is headed to Poland to begin shooting the sci-fi adventure film “High Life,” the first English-language project directed by Denis, whose films he began watching avidly as a teenager. Pattinson’s other forthcoming projects include “Damsel,” a period western costarring Mia Wasikowska and directed by David and Nathan Zellner (“Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter”), and “The Souvenir,” a two-part romantic mystery from British director Joanna Hogg.

Read More After The Cut

PRINT INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson On Connie's Character Development & Staying Under The Radar To The Huffington Post

PRINT INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson On Connie's Character Development & Staying Under The Radar To The Huffington Post

On his whirlwind of interviews at the Good Time Press Junket Rob spoke to The Huffington Post. Check out what he said to them below.

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From The Huffington Post
Robert Pattinson, I’m sorry.

Outside the Bowery Hotel in downtown Manhattan, where I interviewed Pattinson on Thursday morning, a cabal of paparazzi clutched their cameras in anticipation. For this I felt persuaded to apologize by way of introduction. It must feel suffocating to sit on the other side of such vultures.

Pattinson pled ignorance. “I just came in and they weren’t there,” he said, playfully defiant. “I’m almost certain it’s not about me, though.”

Who else would they be looking for?

“I go in and out, and I’m like, ’They’re not following! It’s clearly someone else,’” he said, almost proud at the realization that maybe there’s somebody more sought-after in the building. Doubtful. If anything, his comment proved that he’s all too familiar with the dance that occurs between shutterbug and famous subject. After all, this is the man who, according to a GQ profile published last week, rode around in the trunks of cars and parked rental vehicles throughout Los Angeles in case he needed to make a quick getaway. He’s depressingly well-trained in the art of paparazzi circumvention.

It made sense that Pattinson was semi-incognito when I met him in a discreet corner of the hotel’s bar. Dressed in a chunky gray sweatshirt, jeans and a ratty black baseball cap that covered his forehead and concealed his signature mane, Pattinson was calm about the pap situation but exhausted from the many interviews he’s given in recent weeks to promote “Good Time,” his new movie. “I’m terrible right now,” he said, laughing.

“Good Time” is a film that begs discussion, because of its contents and because it confirms that post-“Twilight” Pattinson will not be pigeonholed into any sort of Hollywood box. By nature, it feels weird to declare one’s love for “Good Time,” a grubby indie drama in which Pattinson plays Connie, a mostly irredeemable goon flitting through Queens, trying to evade the police after robbing a bank with his deaf, mentally challenged younger brother, Nick (Benny Safdie, who co-directed the movie with his brother, Joshua). Connie calls the shots, but Nick is the one who lands in jail, sending Connie on a goose chase to secure $10,000 to bail him out.

Read the Rest After The Cut

At once unnerved and expressionless, this is the fiercest performance of Pattinson’s career, which has taken him from “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire,” “Water for Elephants” and four of those uber-famous vampire flicks to the comparatively obscure art-house scene. Since the “Twilight” series ended in 2012, Pattinson has solidified his range via two movies directed by sci-fi weirdo David Cronenberg (“Cosmopolis” and “Maps to the Stars”), a dystopian revenge drama (“The Rover”) and a few arty biopics that not many people saw, including this year’s excellent “Lost City of Z.”

If popularity is the metric, Pattinson’s IMDb page makes it look like he hasn’t done much over the past five years. It’s not because he isn’t in demand: Pattinson said he reads about eight scripts each week ― that’s more than 400 per year.

He can’t define his taste, not even to his agents: “I’m only looking for things that surprise me, really.” He’s instructed his reps to pass along scripts that feature character descriptions along the lines of “tall, 31, pedophile, gross.” It’s a joke, of course, the point being that Rob Pattinson has no interest in conventional roles. He wants to play the last person you think he’d play.

That’s “harder” today, he confirmed, than it was in 2008, when the inaugural “Twilight” movie opened. Back then, Hollywood was only just beginning its franchise takeover, where familiar properties with ballooning budgets ― reboots, spinoffs, interminable sequels, single books split into two or more movies ― eroded a lot of the space occupied by fresh stories. In fact, “Good Time” came about because Pattinson saw an image from the Safdie brothers’ previous film, the heroin-junkie romance “Heaven Knows What,” and reached out to say he liked their style.

Thankfully, he’s had the paychecks to bankroll his interest in independent projects. Pattinson and co-stars Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner reportedly earned $25 million apiece, along with 7.5 percent of the massive theatrical grosses, for the two-part “Breaking Dawn.” But Pattinson had no idea in 2008 that “Twilight” would help to define Hollywood’s new bigger-is-better economic model.

“I remember when ‘Twilight’ first came out, it was the first time I’d really heard film series be referred to as ‘franchises,‘” Pattinson said. “And then you see everyone talking about the word ‘franchise’ as if it’s this revered term. ‘Franchise’ should not be about a movie. That’s a fast-food restaurant. Everyone was like ‘the franchise, the franchise’ the whole time. I just thought, ‘Shut up!’ It’s rote. All these actors are saying ‘franchise’ ― it’s like, what are you doing? You’ve drunk the Kool-Aid!”

Pattinson may be franchise-free now, but that could change, if Lionsgate gets its way. An executive from the studio, which distributed the “Twilight” films, recently said “there are a lot more stories to be told” in the series, assuming author Stephenie Meyer is keen. This was news to Pattinson.

“Really?” he asked. He then thrust his hands into the air and yelped in faux-enthusiasm: “Yes!”

So, that’s a “no thanks,” right?

“Well, you never know,” he said, backtracking. ”It did inspire me at the time. And, really, it’s kind of awesome. It’s the way people interpret it. People would excuse you for not taking something seriously if it becomes this mainstream thing and everyone’s fiending. I took it just as seriously — more seriously — than other things I’ve done.”

Having developed a sort of paparazzi PTSD from the whole experience, you’d think Pattinson would dismiss any “Twilight” talk out of hand. Instead, he grasps the cultural role it plays, and he clearly respects the fan base ― largely teen girls ― who bought $3.3 billion in tickets worldwide. If nothing else, he understands his reputation is forever linked to that of Edward Cullen, and there’s no point in condemning that.

“It’s also like, you fucking did it,” he said. “It’s you! At the end of the day, the behind-the-scenes shit doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter.”

Because Pattinson backed away from movies that carry the potential to top the box office, he was surprised to learn that talk shows would still book him to promote “Good Time.” Was anyone still interested, he wondered.

“I do sort of live in my own world a lot of the time,” he said. “I’m pretty ignorant. It’s funny ― I’ve basically, as far as I can tell, been really under the radar for years. I’m kind of surprised at it all. [...] I thought I had really reached a hyper-saturation point. And also I think you just keep repeating yourself all the time, and you need to re-form yourself before you have anything to say. I didn’t have anything to say for years. I still don’t really have anything to say.”

Except he does. “Good Time” was his most immersive filmmaking experience to date. A London native, Pattinson embedded himself in Queens, mastering the New York borough’s native accent, losing weight so Connie would look slightly malnourished, and living in a low-rent basement apartment. The story takes place over the course of a single night, including dashes through the streets in unchoreographed shots that let Pattinson interact with his surroundings organically. In terms of bystanders, he went largely unnoticed. At last, invisibility was his.

Indeed, Pattinson, like his co-star and ex-girlfriend Stewart, has made peace with his fame. Now he’s just working to ensure it doesn’t affect those who orbit him ― presumably his current girlfriend, singer FKA Twigs, though he didn’t mention her by name, and probably wouldn’t.

“That’s why I’m always relatively open about stuff about myself, and I always try to contain it to that,” he said. “You can never tell how someone’s going to report something, and how anyone else around you is going to react, because they didn’t ask to be talked about. I can take responsibility for stuff I say about myself, but it’s the same way I don’t like people talking about me.”

Pattinson laughed as he said that last sentence, at which point his publicist announced that our allotted interview time had ended. I shook his hand and strolled out of the Bowery Hotel. It had been less than half an hour since I arrived, and the paparazzi lineup had doubled in size. Pattinson’s new moon isn’t without its old tricks. At least there was no need to be sorry.

VIDEO: Robert Pattinson and the Safdie brothers chat with David Poland about Good Time

VIDEO: Robert Pattinson and the Safdie brothers chat with David Poland about Good Time

27 minutes of goodness. Thank you!

Robert Pattinson and Safdie brothers talk to the Associated Press about Good Time

Robert Pattinson and Safdie brothers talk to the Associated Press about Good Time

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From Associated Press:

LOS ANGELES (AP) — “Good Time” is a story about one bad night gone worse. Robert Pattinson plays a small time Queens crook named Connie Nikas whose botched robbery and escape attempt lands his mentally handicapped brother in jail. And that’s just in the first few minutes. The film doesn’t come up for a breather for the next 90.

People have described “Good Time” as “‘Mean Streets’ on MDMA” and “‘After Hours’ on crack and meth” which might even be too tame to fully capture its kinetic pace. The filmmakers behind it, Josh and Benny Safdie, are two who the general public would be forgiven for not knowing. They are 30-something brothers whose last film, the punishing heroin drama “Heaven Knows What,” played in only 14 theaters.

So how did they get one of the biggest movie stars in the world to lead their next film? Pattinson called them.

The Associated Press sat down with Pattinson and the Safdies (Benny also plays Connie’s brother Nick in the film) to talk about “Good Time” and how a movie star was able to stay hidden in plain sight in New York — even on the subway at rush hour.

Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.
___

AP: It’s a crazy story how Robert became aware of you as filmmakers.

JOSH SAFDIE: It’s not that crazy, is it?

AP: He saw a promotional still from “Heaven Knows What” and decided he had to work with you?

JOSH SAFDIE: I guess it is kind of wild. Honestly I forget the stature of his stardom. To me it’s like a guy saw a picture and he was inspired by it and he reached out. It’s totally normal. But I guess when you look at it from afar it’s kind of crazy.

PATTINSON: I don’t know about the stature of my star, but I think the level of conviction was unusual for me at least. It was like I knew. And then we did the meeting and just agreed to do something. And then also for that to actually happen afterward is even more unusual. People say, “Oh let’s do something together” all the time.

JOSH SAFDIE: I warned you, I said, “Be careful, we are the type of people who when we want to do something we’ll just do it. We’ll figure out a way to do it.”

BENNY SAFDIE: The movie wouldn’t be here had he not reached out to us.

MORE under the cut!

NEW VIDEO: Robert Pattinson and Safdie brothers talk to Hollywood XYZ about Good Time

NEW VIDEO: Robert Pattinson and Safdie brothers talk to Hollywood XYZ about Good Time

Another press junket video! I love when we get these beauties during promo.



VIDEO: Robert Pattinson Talks 'Life', Dennis Stock, James Dean, 'Childhood Of A Leader' & MORE In A Great 12min Interview

VIDEO: Robert Pattinson Talks 'Life', Dennis Stock, James Dean & MORE In A Great 12min Interview 

I feel like we've heard parts of this/similar answers in print interviews and in other Life junket videos but I don't believe we've had this whole interview in one video before.
Forgive me if I'm wrong but I don't think you'll mind looking and listening to 12mins of Rob.

Grab a cuppa, make yourself comfortable and enjoy!



Source
Thanks Sallyvg

VIDEO: Robert Pattinson talks about what it would be like to hang with James Dean for a day

VIDEO: Robert Pattinson talks about what it would be like to hang with James Dean for a day

This is from Berlinale Life promo and Rob is cute and hilarious of course. ;)



Thanks Cali!

VIDEO INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson Talks About Working With Prominent Directors, Exciting Projects & MORE

VIDEO INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson Talks About Working With Prominent Directors, Exciting Projects & MORE  

We saw the pics from Raya's interview with Rob at the Life press Junket in Berlin the other day,  now we have the Video Interview. I love Raya's interviews with Rob. They're just that little bit different to the other run of the mill ones.
Grab a cuppa and relax and have a look below. I think you'll enjoy it.

NEW PIC of Robert Pattinson From The 'Life' Press Junket In Berlin

 NEW PIC of Robert Pattinson From The 'Life' Press Junket In Berlin

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Caption on Pic:
#robert #pattinson #smile from my #computer after the #interview we had in #berlin #berlinale #germany #movies #life #jamesdean #picture #quote "there are always people who want to believe that you don't have a common life"

Source
Thanks Sallyvg

NEW PICS: Robert Pattinson Being Interviewed By 'Scoop By Raya' At The 'Life' Press Junket

NEW PICS: Robert Pattinson Being Interviewed By 'Scoop By Raya' At The 'Life' Press Junket

It looks like this interview with Rob has aired so hopefully we'll have video of it for you soon. Until then check out these cute pics.

Hello Mr Sexy Boots

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And lucky Raya got a hug!

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I want a Rob hug tooooooo

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Click for full size

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Source
Thanks Nancy!

VIDEOS: Robert Pattinson Talks To Sky Cinema At The 'Life' Press Junket

VIDEOS: Robert Pattinson Talks To Sky Cinema At The 'Life' Press Junket

OMG this is hilarious and hot. I can't stop replaying it.



They also have a snippet where they spoke to Rob about Life. Unfortunately it's dubbed.  Starts around 1:10 mark





SourceSource
Thanks Nancy

NEW Robert Pattinson Junket Pic & Short Interview With BILD

NEW Robert Pattinson Junket Pic & Short Interview With BILD

OH HOT DAMN

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From BILD (Translated by Olive in our comments)
"Now don't forget to breathe!

Thousands of girls screaming for Him outside the Berlinale Palast. And BILD sitting inside - very close to Robert Pattinson (28).

During his Berlin trip, the Hollywood star took time for an interview. He was tired, betrayed by the rings under his eyes - his busy schedule left him barely a breather. With coffee and chewing gum he kept himself awake.

He has grown a beard (looking good with it!), His hair tousled, he wears sneakers, T-shirt, open shirt: Mr. Sexy down to earth!

BILD-question about his new film "Life" (opening on October 1st), in which he plays the photographer of iconic star James Dean († 24). Whether the role has changed his relationship with photographers? "Today, people only want to see a star in lousy light. At the time it was different, " Pattinson says.

This is the keyword! Fancy a snapshot? "Yes," grins the vampire from the "Twilight" movies and snaps with the phone. At the sight of our Selfies he himself is astonished: "I still have to get used to my blond beard!"

No wonder: For his role as photographer Dennis Stock, he was completely shaved, the hair nicely parted."

Thanks Nancy for the heads up

VIDEO: Robert Pattinson Talks About Dennis Stock, His Career & More In A NEW Interview With Einsplus

VIDEO: Robert Pattinson Talks About Dennis Stock, His Career & More In A NEW Interview With Einsplus

Ooooh 6 mins of Rob, just what I need!


Thanks Bru!

VIDEO: NEW 'Life' Press Junket Interview With Robert Pattinson At The Berlin Film Festival

VIDEO: NEW 'Life' Press Junket Interview With Robert Pattinson At The Berlin Film Festival

Another new interview from the Life Press Junket in Berlin. Loving all the new interviews. Keep 'em coming.

NEW INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson on Preparing For His Role As A Photographer & Getting Recognised By A Whole Danish Hockey Team

NEW INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson on Preparing For His Role As A Photographer & Getting Recognised By A Whole Danish Hockey Team

Check out this interview Rob had with Swedish site Svenska Dagbladet at the Berlin Press Junket for Life where he talks about getting recognised by the Danish Woman's hockey team & lots more.

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"Robert Pattinson is searching for challenges"

The Twilight-movies made him an idol for millions of swarming fans. But in "Life", which is being shown at the Berlin film festival, Robert Pattinson wants to clarify that he is also an excellent actor.

- I want to do things that challenges me and things I haven't done before, he says, but adds:

- But if something good comes up which is similar to something I've done before I of course accept.


"Life", directed by Anton Corbijn has a Swedish release date this upcoming fall, is about the friendship between James Dean and photographer Dennis Stock. He's the one who took the classic images of Dean with a cigarette in his mouth, taking a walk at Times Square in New York. James Dean is portrayed by Dane DeHaan and Pattinson plays Stock.

- Of course I had seen the images he took, but I did not know who he was. Anton gave me a taped interview with him where Stock was extremely rude towards the interviewer. He was obviously carrying a lot of baggage.

For many actors it always feels a little extra nervous to portray a real person (Stock passed away a few years ago). Pattinson says he usually feels that "a role is just a role".

- But then I met Dennis son and it made me more aware that I needed to be fair to how his father was in real life.

To play a still photographer demanded that the actor had to be able to handle a camera properly. Pattinson practised for months before shooting began.

- As a photographer the camera is supposed to be like a part of his body, he also uses it to hide behind while taking pictures. I practised with the Leica I use in the movie, but it made me nervous. It was terribly expensive.

The role as the vampire Edward Cullen in the "Twilight"- movies made Robert Pattinson world famous and he has many loyal but sometimes also intrusive fans.

- Although it has become a little bit better in recent years. Or maybe it's me who has become better at handling it, he says.

He is not easy to recognize, because the role in the recently finished drama "Childhood of a leader" made him grow a full beard. However it wasn't helpful on a flight recently.

- There was a team with Danish hockey girls, all in their teens. They recognized me immediately, he says smiling adding:

- A whole danish hockey team. Oh My God!


Original Interview Source
Translation by Mija

Am I The Only One That Melts When Robert Pattinson Speaks A Foreign Language?

Am I The Only One That Melts When Robert Pattinson Speaks A Foreign Language?




Welcome to Berlin Indeed

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