Rob on BBC at 10:30AM (EST)
Rob will be on BBC Radio One at 3:30PM local time (10:30AM Eastern Standard time). You can listen to the radio HERE.
Thanks to Kate for the heads up :-))
Another day another hottest of 2008 list
Bravo Magazine Scans
US Premiere-slips from British to American accent
Okay it's the US premiere not UK. Black on black, duh! Thanks to Jovie for the correction :-)
Twilight Trading Cards...Continued
Well, if you’ve ever tried to watch a feature length porno… it’s tough
IndieLondon has an interview with Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart. Here are the parts with Rob that are new:
Q. But in terms of living up to the fans’ expectations concerning the characters, you’ve clearly done that. So that must be a source of relief?
Robert Pattinson: Yeah. They’d probably kill us otherwise. They almost killed us before the thing came out!
Q. How did you work on developing the sexual tension that exists between your characters?
Robert Pattinson: I used to sometimes just run into Kristen’s bedroom naked! [laughs] To keep shocking her! But seriously, it’s funny because all the romantic scenes are all pivotal moments in the movie… but I’m never really sure how to answer that question. It was worrying, though, because we were both wearing contact lenses and so much of it is to do with visual eye contact. So, we both had these kind of masks over our eyeballs, and so it was really worrying the whole time that there wouldn’t be anything between us. It was lucky that there was, I guess.
Q. What is the fascination with showing vampires that are good? There have been a few examples lately…
Robert Pattinson: I think there are probably a lot of reasons for it. But I think today it’s a way you can present violence as something that isn’t too bad. For some reason humans are very accepting of the vampiric violence. If Luke Perry in Buffy just went around… if he was just some kid who went around killing people all the time it would have had a very different slant. But he’s a vampire and people accept it. They say: “Oh that’s fine; he kills people but he’s a vampire!” They can understand it. That’s probably the worst possible answer [laughs].
Q. There’s very much an element of sexual abstinence… it’s more about the anticipation. How essential was that?
Robert Pattinson: Well, if you’ve ever tried to watch a feature length porno… it’s tough [laughs].
Q. Has your life changed a great deal since being a part of this franchise? Do you live in the States now?
Robert Pattinson: I’m not really living there. I was, on and off, for 15 months. But I haven’t changed that much… in my head I don’t think I’ve changed. It can be strange to have people following you to your house… But the whole thing with the screaming, it seems so separate still. I can go on the Tube, for instance, and hardly anybody knows who I am. But then you can go to these premieres and people scream at you. It feels like they’ve all been paid to be there. It’s like: “Right, all the screamers, you have to be in this spot at 7.30pm!” So, it’s odd.
Q. What about when you’re walking up Oxford Street and your face goes past on a bus?
Robert Pattinson: That’s scary! It’s like being in 1984 – you see your reflection everywhere. It’s not good for someone who suffers from extreme paranoia [laughs]. Luckily, I don’t get out of the house too much.
Q. Have you ever got on a bus with your face on it?
Robert Pattinson: I think I did once. During Harry Potter, I was actually looking after someone from America and I actually had food poisoning and passed out on the bus. It was just when Harry Potter came out and this person who got me up said: “Is that you [on the poster]?” I was like, “yes, it is”.
Q. Your songs are used in the film. Were you ever intending for them to be made public?
Robert Pattinson: One of the songs was written by two friends of mine and that’s one of the reasons I liked the idea of it. I grew up with a whole bunch of musicians and so I thought it would be good for them. I don’t really have any intention of releasing an album, but I thought it would be quite good for them. I think there’s a bit of a stigma attached to actors who release music. So, maybe I’ll try and release an album anonymously or something, or wait ‘til I’m unemployable.
Q. Do you still stay in touch with the local theatre group you started out with?
Robert Pattinson: The theatre company was just a place I went to because a lot of the pretty girls went there. That was the only reason I went and I worked backstage. I only started acting when all the good people left and I was the only one tall enough to play the lead [laughs]. But I guess I did learn quite a lot from it. It didn’t really make me decide to become an actor. But it definitely helped me out. I got my agent from there and I definitely wouldn’t be an actor if I hadn’t gone there.
Q. Are you worried that a role like this may typecast you in terms of what you might be offered in the future?
Robert Pattinson: I guess it makes it a little scarier to decide what your next job is. But if you choose carefully and you try to do good movies, then people don’t care. Hopefully I won’t get typecast.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)