Showing posts with label rob should talk about sex more often. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rob should talk about sex more often. Show all posts

PICS & INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson chats with LA Times about The Lighthouse and other sexual activities

PICS & INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson chats with LA Times about The Lighthouse and other sexual activities

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Excerpt from LA Times interview: Robert Pattinson, Willem Dafoe and the ‘orgasm that won’t stop in ‘The Lighthouse’

Robert Pattinson knows he needs to stop talking about masturbation.

Case in point: At a Q&A last weekend for “The Lighthouse,” the loopy, claustrophobic chamber piece that pairs him with Willem Dafoe, Pattinson couldn’t even bring himself to say the word when asked about a scene in which his character engages in self-abuse so furiously that the euphemism “self-abuse” actually applies.

And yet, shortly afterward, sitting across from Dafoe in the sleek Pacific Design Center office space of indie film distributor A24, Pattinson admits that he’s been purposefully leaning into the subject while doing interviews for “The Lighthouse.” A friend just sent him a screenshot of headlines featuring his name and masturbation, asking in a follow-up text, “So ... um ... how exactly are you promoting this movie?”

“I do find it quite entertaining,” Patttinson says, chuckling. “It definitely gets people talking about the film.” He pauses, considering. “I don’t know if it gets people to actually see the film.” He bursts out laughing at the thought. “The other day, I was saying to A24, ‘I’m not sure how successful I am at doing this promotional stuff.’”

Dafoe chimes in, purring: “Was it good for you?”

“The Lighthouse,” which opened last weekend to an enviable per-screen average and expands nationwide this weekend, doesn’t lack for topics to discuss. It’s a late 19th century tale of two lighthouse keepers, “wickies,” to use the parlance of the times — Ephraim Winslow (Pattinson) and Thomas Wake (Dafoe) — trying to keep madness at bay when a powerful storm hits their desolate New England island station. Director Robert Eggers shot the film in black-and-white and in a boxy aspect ratio that accentuates the story’s prevailing cabin fever.

As for the story, there are sex dreams about mermaids, ill-tempered seagulls who seem possessed, flatulence employed as “deliberate displays of power,” visions of Dafoe’s Thomas as Poseidon (and as a mermaid!) and, at its center, the mystery of the lighthouse itself, a secret Thomas seems to understand, greedily guarding his knowledge from Ephraim.

“People see what they want to see,” Dafoe says, delighting in the film’s ambiguity. “Some people talk about a father-son story. Some people see it as boss and employee, master and apprentice. Some people dig into the homoerotic stuff. Some people just like the farts.”

The movie’s leads have little in common other than their angular features or, as Eggers puts it, “four of the finest cheekbones to ever grace the Earth.” They did both love Eggers’ first film, the unsettling Puritan-set horror story “The Witch,” and separately approached the filmmaker, indicating an interest in collaborating.

But the actors part ways when it comes to preparation. During rehearsal, Pattinson prefers to talk about the script; Dafoe, citing his theater days with the experimental Wooster Group, just wants to dive in, holding nothing back. Dafoe never stops performing. Pattinson needs the adrenaline shot that comes when the camera rolls, the “controlled moment between action and cut where it’s too late for everyone.” Too late? “You can’t get fired,” Pattinson elaborates, laughing.

Job security was low on the list of concerns of a production that filmed at Cape Forchu in Nova Scotia, where production designer Craig Lathrop and his team built a full-scale lighthouse station. The weather was windy and freezing cold. And when conditions weren’t nasty enough, Eggers turned on a fire hose to douse Pattinson, as the actor trudged around the barren landscape hauling a wheelbarrow full of coal.

“That was actually exhilarating,” Pattinson says. “Anything that makes you not have to act. Willem can actually act. I have to literally just say, ‘Please hit me with a shovel.’ So I appreciate the fire hose at the end of the day.”

“How do I deal with this charming self-deprecation?” Dafoe asks. And he really means it. Since the actors kept their distance throughout the shoot, they’re just now getting to know each other. Pattinson offers an observation about Dafoe’s acting technique, prompting Dafoe to cry, “I don’t have technique! I have instinct!”

Click HERE to read the rest of the interview but it also includes a SPOILER for the end of the film in the form of a Rob quote!

Source: LATimes | Glenn Whipp

Robert Pattinson talks cell phone bills, what haunts him, sex scenes, Cosmopolis, Cannes and more

Robert Pattinson talks cell phone bills, what haunts him, sex scenes, Cosmopolis, Cannes and more 
UPDATE: Google translation from Cicero.de removed and replace with OliveColouredVoice's translation in the comments. Thanks Olive!
“Delillo’s words are like the bible”
With his new film, Cosmpolis, Robert Pattinson ventures to the abysses of the financial world. Cicero online talked to the ex-vampire about the lethargy of his generation, split personalities and pastry assassinations.

Mr. Pattinson, Eric Packer is leaving his aura, his limo, once and immediately he is attacked with a cake. Was there a similar moment in your career? 

Strangely, I have shot a similar scene for "Water for Elephants".  But otherwise, no, not that I know of.  Maybe in a metaphorical sense ...

No aggressive paparazzi and overzealous fans? 

No, no one dared to do that so far.  Thank God, otherwise that would have had consequences.

How would you describe your character in the movie? 

Eric Packer is a man who looks at the whole world very abstract, himself, his body, his fellow men.  He shows egomaniacal characteristics and lives in his inner self, in a world in which actual reality doesn’t exist. Throughout the film, he finally tries to regain control of his body, of himself, until he gives up completely at the end.

What will remain to you of Eric Packer?

It's weird.  I had to remember so much text and I thought these lines would disappear from my brain as soon as each scene is filmed. But the words are still there, I can still memorize the entire script.  It sounds stupid, but there are times a day in which I quote passages from DeLillo, flawless. David (Cronenberg) always says: "It's like the Bible!  There is a quote for every occasion! Somehow DeLillo's words are still stuck with me. Their meaning becomes more and more aware to me. Especially in the scene with Samantha Morton, as we talk about the future, there are passages that haunt me literally. (Tink: If he really said this, I totally relate. When you embrace the film, those words and passages stick with you long after and you do end up quoting them.)

Is this due to DeLillo's strong lyrical, poetic word formations? 

Yes.  I was unsure at first to accept the movie offer because I thought it would be extremely boring.  Because basically, "Cosmopolis" is about people who are talking in a car – just that. One can easily miss the point in the movie.  Either you follow DeLillo's words all the time, or you lose yourself in it, without knowing exactly what happens - then you are left with only a couple of nice pictures.  David (Cronenberg) had so many strange ideas, things that at first I did not really understand.  But if you’ll let yourself get involved with this, you'll see the whole picture!  I've seen the film three times now.  It was only the second time I could really get involved and I was just completely overwhelmed.

You say DeLillo's words haunt you. Did the the movie teach you something about life, about our times that you weren’t aware of beforehand? 

Some things of political current affairs I haven’t thought about much while shooting, such as the Occupy-Wall Street movement .  Then we did the protest scene: 200 extras rattled the limo, climbed onto the roof and tried with all their might to overturn the car.  We sat there and focused on our dialogue - and it was so easy to ignore all this!  You forget that 200 people are out there, just basically trying to kill you.  That's insane!  Every day we pursue similar scenes in the real world, watching TV.  And you just have to turn it off and suddenly you forget what’s happening out there in the world.  With Occupy thousands of people are fighting for a cause, and all their efforts have absolutely no effect on those against whom they protest.  That's kind of scary. A few years ago I read a book about slavery.  It described how brutal the slave owners have been to their slaves during daytime and at night they were talking about theology and God.  Actually that shows that one and the same person can live in two completely different realities.  While preparing for my role, I watched the interview between the serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer and his father.  This is so sad.  If you then imagine what Dahmer did you ask yourself how you can ever have pity with such a creature.  In such moments your own emotional condition divides from the life story of the reality of this person.

Were you inspired by Jeffrey Dahmer for your role?

A little bit.  Mainly I was looking for a voice.  I watched Ted Bundy and Jeffrey Dahmer, and then found this Dahmer interview with his father.  And coincidentally, at the end of the shoot it turned out that Paul Giamatti was watching exactly the same interview for his long final monologue.

Do you engage yourself politically? 

Not in public.  I form an opinion, but I’ll watch out for not telling people what to do.  Maybe I just know too little to take responsibility for the actions of other people.

But you could still use your Twilight image to sensitize the younger generation for political and economic world events! 

I don’t know.  My generation shares this aggressive apathy, in which no one goes to the polls and at the same time they are irritated that everything slowly but surely loses significance.  That’s ridiculous! People do make their own world!  If I look at the Occupy phenomenon for example: Even if you don’t agree on the message itself or you can’t identify with the content, I think it's great that at least a few more people are getting involved.

Do you know anything of economy? 

No.

What do you do with your money?

I hide it under the bed.  Probably that's pretty stupid, but I don’t understand much of it.  I just hope that I will be fine.

In the film Eric Packer seems very static. Basically, there are no changes in his facial expressions, gestures, or even in his own language, like a zombie, he moves through New York until he shoots himself in the hand at the end. Here you see a little humanity. 

(Laughs embarrassed) It shouldn’t be like that with the static  perception.  Eric Packer's development takes place largely within him, very subtle.  I think he is trying to be reborn. 

And this slow, subtle development is also reflected in the slow-moving traffic and in the funeral ...

Exactly.  He is like an iceberg - in the end he begins to break apart until nothing is left.

How critical are you with your own performance?

Very critical.  This is the first film I've seen more than once, mainly because I was forced to.  (Laughs) I had to watch  it in Cannes and was not allowed to leave the room.

Did you want to leave?

For heaven's sake, yes!  When I saw the movie for the first time, it was not quite ready yet.  The second time I really liked it.  And at Cannes, I didn’t watch it at all, I just watched  the audience.  With every cough, every clearing of the throat I thought: Oh my God, what does this mean?  I’m always critical with my work, I mean, after all you want people to like what you are doing.  After all that is the reason to make the next film.

Mr. Pattinson, thank you for your time!
 All 3 of these interviews are translated...you guys know the drill :)

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Two more interviews after the cut!

Robert Pattinson talks about Cosmopolis sex scenes, Mission: Blacklist, The Rover, Breaking Dawn Part 2, WaxRob and McDonalds

Robert Pattinson talks about Cosmopolis sex scenes, Mission: Blacklist, The Rover, Breaking Dawn Part 2, WaxRob and McDonalds

From Metro (UK):

He’s Britain’s second-richest under-30 actor behind Daniel Radcliffe, worth a fortune of more than £30millio. He’s one of Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in The World. He’s the Sexiest Man In The World. But he’s made a huge mistake.

‘Sorry, I just had a McDonald’s!’ laughs Robert Pattinson. ‘My stomach’s going, “Raaargh!” I always think McDonald’s is a good idea. It’s never been a good idea.’
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Now would be a great time to forget what you think you know about Pattinson. Forget the fame, the money, the daft awards, the vampire movies, the screaming tweens, the are-they-aren’t-they? thing with Kristen Stewart. Not only is film-maker David Cronenberg’s arty, sexy, talky new psychothriller Cosmopolis possibly the weirdest movie of the year, it gives us a new kind of Robert Pattinson. He plays a bored multi-billionaire traveling across Manhattan in a white stretch limo to get a haircut. Only he gets a little more than that. En route, he’ll have been screwed by Oscar-winning French actress Juliet Binoche and a gun-toting prostitute (Tink: Poor reporter is a nitwit. So sad. The "prostitute" is Eric's bodyguard.), mobbed by protestors and hit in the face with a cream pie, stalked, shot and divorced. No hair-gelled bloodsuckers. No werewolves in cut-off jeans.

‘This is one of the first movies that I’m in where I can watch it and not just want to kill myself,’ says the actor, who was stunned when Canadian meastro Cronenberg called him for the role. ‘I was really, really nervous until we started doing it. And I didn’t know there were going to be sex scenes. It said, “They just had sex” in the script. And both days David was like, “I think they should be having sex during the scene.” Okay...! David said, “Don’t worry. Let’s just start and see what happens.’
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What happened was the darkest, smartest performance of Pattinson’s career, which has trampolined in a series of truly bizarre ups and downs. His big-screen debut as Reese Witherspoon’s son in period drama Vanity Fair was left on the cutting-room floor. He scored a role in a biggest teen franchise in the world (Harry Potter). He got fired from a play in London and spent a year and a half as a couch-surfing out-of-work actor in Los Angeles. He scored a role in the biggest teen franchise in the world (Twilight).

Five years ago, he was nobody. Now he’s so famous he may never go for a beer in public again. He turned 26 last month and he can feel it, the change, something lost, something gained. ‘I’m quite sensitive to people,’ he says. ‘You pick up on moods quicker, I think. I’m also really good at sensing if someone is around. It’s weird, it’s like a sixth sense. I always know if someone’s taking a picture as well.’
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Those spidey-senses have been tingling off the hook. Inevitably, fame has been a drain for Pattinson. ‘You see people just taking a picture casually at a different table,’ he laughs, with a shrug. ‘I’ve got into the habit now of going up to people with my phone with the flash on and just start taking pictures two inches away from their face.’
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It’s not Rob they want, of course. It’s Edward Cullen. It’s ‘R-Pattz’. He was literally replaced when Madam Tussauds gave him a waxwork. A really, really terrible waxwork. ‘It looks like Hugh Jackman,’ he exclaims. ‘I think it IS Hugh Jackman – they’ve just smushed it in a bit.’
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Or maybe it’s the inner Pattinson, the one who feels melted by the Twi-light. ‘If you get famous, you can really buy into it, then you go nuts. But I never really felt comfortable going, “Yes, I’m famous!” I don’t know why.’

His bold, charismatic remoulding in Cosmopolis, then, couldn’t have come at a better time. On November 16, the final Twilight movie, Breaking Dawn Part II, will be released – and so will Pattinson, he hopes, from the hysteria of Stephenie Meyer’s teen saga.

Can he give us a reason to watch it? ‘It’s really funny, the last one,’ he chuckles. ‘I mean, funny and completely insane. There’s Jacob is falling in love with my daughter, who grows into an 11-year-old in three months! There were so many scenes where it felt so bizarre.’
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Five years, four movies, a bit of hair gel and a lot of crying and screaming later, Pattinson is ready to bust out the Twilight zone. Next up he has a crime thriller by hotshot director of Oz gangster drama Animal Kingdom (‘Guy Pearce kidnaps me and I’ve been shot. It’s like, crazily violent’) and psychological drama Mission: Black List, playing the US military interrogator who found Saddam Hussein (‘Some of the stuff in it is just unbelievably insane’). (Tink: Eeeeeeee! EXCITE!)
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There’s just one last problem he needs to fix: how to get people to stop calling him R-Pattz... ‘Yeah, I don’t know how to get rid of that,’ he sighs. ‘It is the most annoying thing. I don’t know who invented it. This thing with nicknames, everybody loves nicknames, it’s so irritating. But it’s too catchy...’

Cosmopolis is out today in the UK
 
Via: Spunk Ransom | SimpletonGif: Source 

Robert Pattinson talks to MSN (Italy) about Breaking Dawn Sex Scenes

Robert Pattinson talks to MSN (Italy) about Breaking Dawn Sex Scenes

Oh this one is goooood. Anytime Rob talks about himself in the little robe and thong...I love it.

Highlights:
  • Broken beds and other things that can't be discussed on TV ;)
  • If people are shy, the sex scenes are harder
  • Talks about how unnecessary it was to wear a thong on set (SO FUNNY!)
  • Talks about the last scene
  • Marrying the wrong or right woman
 

Click the image to view original source!

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Source: MSNit | Via: RobPattsMoms

Robert Pattinson talks about Breaking Dawn and more to F Magazine (Singapore)

Robert Pattinson talks about Breaking Dawn and more to F Magazine (Singapore)

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The print is horribly small on the scans so I transcribed some of the newer bits for you. Interview took place during Comic Con:
Interviewer: Do you look forward to the hype all being over and you can get back to doing other things?

Rob: Yeah but it's always a good thing to have a bit of hype, especially nowadays. But I don't know. I will be interested to see how people perceive me in a couple of years because it seems as though people have been talking about the same stuff about me for about three years now, so I am wondering how long that will go on for (Tink: Me too...). But I don't really know how to predict anything.

Interviewer: How is it professionally for you right now, because I guess you are looking for roles post-twilight, so what kind of scripts are you getting? Do you still feel you are trapped in that role, or are you being offered things that are allowing you to expand your repertoire?

Rob: I'm kind of in the same position. I guess the good thing is that because Twilight is so specific, and Edward is such a specific character...I've just realized my flies are undone (zips flies), that's a bit embarrassing...(Tink: *distracted*)...yeah he's so specific that you can't really get typecast; there are only so many parts that are benevolent vampires. You would be insane to do another one afterwards. Every single thing I've done since has seemed very difference, because it's almost impossible to do the same or something like that, everyone will say that you are doing the same movie if you ever do an action movie again, but I just don't have to do a benevolent vampire movie again or vampire love story.

Interviewer: Would you like to direct a movie?

Rob: Yeah, maybe. I would like to write stuff. I would really like to be a script doctor, that would be my ideal job, you get all the fun, creative stuff - all the parts of acting that I really like are really just figuring out how to make a script that doesn't work, work, (Tink: *snicker* Know who I'm thinking about?) and I would like to do that for other projects but you have to write some stuff first to get into that industry.

Interviewer: After comparing raising a child to raising a puppy the interviewer says: Trust me, it's nothing like having a puppy.

Rob: That's what I keep saying in other interviews that, "It's just like raising a dog, it's the same thing. You've just got to leave it alone and tell it to go tot the toilet outside." (Tink: LOL! He's too funny...can't you hear him saying this in his joking mimic voice?)

After the interviewer asked Rob about filming the sex scene, Rob made a comment that I found insane.

Rob: I don't know, it's strange, trying to do anything that's a singular even that everyone is expecting, but at the end of the day, with sex, watching other people have sex is never going to be that spectacular - hopefully it will be kind of good. It's a strange thing when there is so much hype about it so that you're like 'God, I hope this lives up to it.' (Tink: Right. Rob is not spectacular here. In no way spectacular. That back and....everything else is as boring as celery.)
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Lick and save because it's not staying up. I just had a relapse into the deepest darkest recesses, that's all.

Let's continue...IF you can tear your eyes away.

Interviewer: What about the childbirth scene? That's pretty spectacular in the book. That's pretty horrific.

Rob: Yeah, I think that one is much more difficult to not make R-rated than the sex scenes. I mean, you see sex scenes in PG-13 films the whole time, you just turn the light down really low and it's a PG-13 (Tink: Oooooooooh...THAT'S why Rob's sex scenes are always so dark...and we all lighten them up LOL).

(Tink: Demonstration of lighter...)
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Rob: It was horrible doing it. And especially because we did it with a real baby as well so almost immediately after this horrible - I don't know if you would call it a Caesarian, this chewing through the placental thing. I don't know, it was absolutely bizarre - then being covered in cream cheese and jelly to look like...it was just horrible holding this baby. The baby was only about three months old, or two months - it was really young, maybe even only two weeks old, so I was like, "What a horrible introduction - this baby is never going to be an actor, ever."

Interviewer: I always wonder about mother who put their babies up for things like that.

Rob: She was just really nice. She was very calm about everything, just watching everything. People are so careful about everything, you'd be crazy not to be. I remember it being really cold on the set that day, so that was the one thing that I felt insanely nervous about - I had told everyone to put in all these heaters everywhere which steamed up all the windows and ruined the whole shot, but there was this poor baby having to have jam on its head and cream cheese on its head as well. I was like, "I'm really sorry! Please don't blame me for this!" (Tink: Could he BE any sweeter?)
After Rob talks about the increase of haters when you get well known for something, he says:
But also the great thing about Twilight fans is that they are all very, very vocal and they are very protective about stuff, so you always have an army of people defending you. (Tink: Damn right!)

Interviewer: It's like a sports team.

Rob: Yeah, it's like a team, that's exactly what it is with celebrities: people have fun hating on them and people have fun supporting them, it's just the way it is. It's really strange.

Interviewer: Do you ever look up stuff on the internet? Or do you totally avoid reading anything about yourself?

Rob: Sometimes, mainly for practical purposes, like if you feel like you have said something stupid you go and check to see what the backlash is about to see if I have to do another interview to dissipate that. It's always mainly just damage control all the time.

Interviewer: In hindsight, what do you think the importance or the value of the twilight franchise will be, looking back at it? What has it brought to our society, as it is so influential to the youth?

Rob: I think anything that gets young people reading is one thing that is pretty important. That was the same thing when I did Harry Potter: it's kind of amazing, but Harry Potter completely changed everything. I don't remember kids talking about books, and the young adult genre was so much smaller before Harry Potter, and thing like Twilight and Harry Potter just exploded. And also, in terms of the movies, doing things for a female audience - that changed things as well. I don't think it has really changed things yet but it made people in the industry aware that women - just solely women - are a legitimate audience for movies, which in a strange sort of way, is good for guys as well because I think the industry got convinced that the only people who go to the cinema were teenage boys, so every single movie that came out was directed towards them, but it you start making movies for women, it will eventually dissipate into just making dramas again - just non-action movies - because people think they are girly movies, and they are the movies I like! (Tink: phew! Take a breather, Rob. Great answer though. Mr. Reader Man of course loves that the kids are reading and I love that he gives women a shout out for being the driving force for the billion dollar series.)
The interviewer concludes with asking him how Comic Con has been and Rob says he wanted an Excalibur replica...LOL

My eyes are now cross because I essentially transcribed this whole article. Even when it's old quotes, Rob is still so compelling and I just couldn't stop.

Scans




Scans: Twifans via: Gossip Dance

Robert Pattinson talks about Breaking Dawn, Cosmopolis and a lot of sex during Berlin Press Junket

Robert Pattinson talks about Breaking Dawn, Cosmopolis and a lot of sex during Berlin Press Junket

This is a good interivew...maybe it's the sex talk swaying me. And the giggly, flustered, and cocky Rob all in one as well.

Video highlights:

  • Talks about how he prepared to give a Cesarian by teeth
  • Get's a little cocky (NICE!) regarding his headboard breaking scene...pressures on you! *points to all other males in the world*
  • His comfort level with filming sex scenes. I need to be on crew...
  • 3 SEX SCENES IN COSMOPOLIS! I REPEAT! THREEEEEEE SEX SCEEEEEEEENESSSS IN CAAAAAAHHHHSMAAAAAAAHHHHHPOLIS!!!!!!!! sorry about that... *creeps back to dark recesses*



2012...the year of Rated R Rob. Praise the Lord.

Original Video Via: Spunk Ransom

Robert Pattinson talks about his nudity and more during Breaking Dawn Press Junkets

Robert Pattinson talks about his nudity and more during Breaking Dawn Press Junkets

Rob spoke to IMDb and had much to share. Highlights from the interview:
  • Summarizes Breaking Dawn
  • Talks about the shock value of Breaking Dawn
  • Discussing his initial inexperience for the first movie and the growth of Kristen and Taylor
  • His opinion on IMDb



Rob also talked about being comfortable with his nudity in films. So are we, Rob...so are we.


srpro.112611lcitf1rpbd1 by officialspunkransom



Translation after the cut

Robert Pattinson interview from Breaking Dawn Belgium press junket

Robert Pattinson interview from Breaking Dawn Belgium press junket

Rob...surely the message isn't never have sex. This fandom is wildly sex-driven. *eyes the dark recesses*

Robert Pattinson talks to Hot Hits about Breaking Dawn

Robert Pattinson talks to Hot Hits about Breaking Dawn

Cute...go ahead and try and down play it Rob. ;) Taylor also talks throughout the interview but be sure to listen to everything. Rob talks about working on PG13 sex scenes and what he's gotten away with in other films.



Original after the cut!

NEW: Robert Pattinson talks about Breaking Dawn sex scenes and makes a funny comparison

NEW: Robert Pattinson talks about Breaking Dawn sex scenes and makes a funny comparison

It doesn't get old....Rob is talking sex again! Hollywood Dailies talks to Rob, Kristen, and Taylor.

Rob at :58

Showcase Saturday starring Robert Pattinson

Showcase Saturday starring Robert Pattinson

Yes, I'm sneaking in an alliteration post. 2 reasons...

First reason, Dukkesa31 just uploaded a GREAT video that can't wait until the next drought. It feels like the video for the opening games of PromoRob! She's even got BeardyRob pics from yesterday in the vid! The song feels like our anthem in the dark recesses. So it MUST be watched. :)



Second reason...

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Gifs: WeHeartPattinson Tumblr

Showcase Saturday starring Robert Pattinson

At the top of this Showcase Saturday starring Robert Pattinson, I'm already exclaiming, "Sweet God Almighty!"

Alright now listen...the song does make you feel like you're in a time warp BUT! Please make sure you are not mobile or standing when you watch this. Between the wind-blown sexhair and the brightened WFE sex scene...*fans self* have MERCY! I feel the heat!



Did the lightened up WFE sex scene kill you or did the lightened up WFE sex scene kill you??

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Next up we have an older video. It doesn't have a high view count so I'm thinking many haven't seen it. Got me excited for all the promo videos we'll have for Breaking Dawn :) Plenty of "I want you so bad" sex stares in this hot toddy!



And to close us out, we have a super sweet video. His giggle is infectious. I couldn't stop the big grin on my face. "I feel good" indeed!



See ya next week!

Robert Pattinson talks Breaking Dawn, Cosmopolis, and More with Donna Moderna (Italy)

Robert Pattinson talks Breaking Dawn, Cosmopolis, and more with Donna Moderna (Italy)

Every time Rob mentions Cosmopolis, I feel compelled to post SuitRob.

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You know how these things go. Elements may be lost in translation. So either take it with a grain of salt or give yourself a headache.

-Where's your house?
"I don't have one. Or rather, I have my parents' house in London, but my room has become a sort of warehouse where I leave the stuff I can't take with me. I can't take too many things, 2-3 bags at most. That's why I always wear the same clothes."

- We will see you in Breaking Dawn part 1 and 2 soon.
"They are the harder movies of the series, and I wonder how they're going to distribute them with a PG 13 rating. There are a lot of sex scenes and so many other things that are not suitable for children" (his look gets mischievous and cheerful)

- How similar are you to Edward?
"We both think sex without love doesn't make sense"

-What if they asked you to keep playing this role?
"That's a closed chapter. I've just finished filming Bel Ami where I play a cynical, seducer, social-climber. Then I will be the main character in David Cronemberg's Cosmopolis. I'll play the role of an American millionaire who, within 24 hours in Manhattan, lives his descent into hell. I still can't believe I'll be working with a director like Cronemberg. And I even wanted to quit acting after Harry Potter and The Goblet of Fire! Nobody wanted me, while my band was starting to sign its first contracts and earn some money. Then I got offered the role of Salvador Dalì in Little Ashes. After that movie I realized I really liked acting and put music aside."

- So you won't play a romantic role ever again?
"Never say never. But I need to change a bit, or either the audience and I would get bored eventually." Panic: we're already orphan because of Leonardo Di Caprio, will we be orphan because him as well? It would be a bad piece of news since I'm interviewing the romantic hero Pattinson on the romantic wedding day between William and Kate. I don't even have the time to finish the sentence that he asks "How did the Royal Wedding go? Have they already kissed?" Yes, the kind of kiss you and Kristen shared in public...And there's back his polite and irresistible smile, as he explains "I've been avoiding this topic for years, but I can say I love big love stories"






Translation | Source | Via

Reese Witherspoon talks making love in Water for Elephants poster with Robert Pattinson

During her interview on Conan O'Brien, Reese Witherspoon talked about the Water for Elephants poster and how it can symbolize making love with Robert Pattinson. Certainly glad I own a copy ;)



Popsugar

Robert Pattinson wallpapers: Making You The Outtakes Love volume 10

This past week brought us some fantastic outtakes from photo shoots over 2 years old! Better late than never ;) Marina H. got to work and pumped out some fabulous wallpapers for us.

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Click HERE to grab the UHQ outtakes from this shoot.

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*giggle* remember that interview?




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Click HERE to grab the UHQ outtakes from this shoot & click HERE if you're not familiar with the quote from Rob's Q&A with Vanity Fair back in 2008.

A bonus paper Marina did for CosmopolisFilm :) A treat after all the great Cosmopolis news lately!

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Lick and save for HQ!




Click HERE to grab some Edward love from volume 9

MTV: Rough Cut Talks To Robert Pattinson & Emilie DeRavin

MTV: Rough Cut Talks To Robert Pattinson & Emilie DeRavin, enjoy!







Gozde: So Emilie was less nervous... I bet! She wakes up, checks the schedule: "Sex with Robler" and flies to set :)



Gozde: There's a LOT of sex in the other movie... I like the sound of that:)
And the more Rob talks about Bel Ami the more I am convinced I won't survive it. Hope they'll have oxygen tanks and ambulances on standby at the theater :)



Thanks to Anna Lee for the tip

You Tube versions









 
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