miércoles, 27 de mayo de 2009

Robert Pattinson answers 17 juicy questions!




Harry Potter hottie Robert Pattinson answers Seventeen's juicy questions, including which of his Twilight costars he's currently crushing on!



  1. When was your first kiss? 12.

  2. Who's your celebrity crush? Kristen Stewart (his Twilight, costar!)

  3. What's a girl fashion trend that confuses you? Ugg boots!

  4. What's the girly movie you secretly love? Pippi Longstocking.

  5. What's your TV guilty pleasure? American Idol and X Factor (the British version of Idol).

  6. Who would play you in the movie version of your life? I'd play it because I probably won't be employed after this.

  7. What's your dream job? Being a pianist.

  8. If you could trade places with anyone in the world for one day, who would it be? Someone who has lots of respect or power. George Bush, possibly.

  9. Who in your family are you closest to? My dog, Patty.

  10. What's your favorite Website? YouTube.

  11. What's the fast food you can't live without? I like all fast food, but my favorite is probably In-N-Out Burger.

  12. What's your worst habit? Speaking too much.

  13. What's the last song you listened to on your iPod? I don't remember the exact song, but it was something James Brown from the Black Caesar sound track.

  14. What's the last thing you bought? Toilet paper.

  15. What did you dream about last night? Kristen [Stewart].

  16. How much money is in your wallet right now? Thousands of dollars.

  17. Fill in the blank: When I was 17, I was ____________. So much cooler because I knew less about myself.




FUENTE.

lunes, 9 de marzo de 2009

Jackson Rathbone interview.


Jackson Rathbone (Jasper) plays a vampire who has the ability to manipulate emotions in the big screen adaptation of Twilight, the bestselling book by Stephenie Meyer. At Twilight's Los Angeles premiere - surrounded by hundreds of fans who didn't stop screaming for three hours. Rathbone talked about Meyer's take on vampire mythology.



So we don't really see his special powers in this one.
Jackson Rathbone: Oh no.


Why?
Jackson Rathbone: We've a lot to do in this film and Jasper's powers are one of those that you don't really want to give up right on the onset. I think, hopefully, we get to do the second and third film and by the third film I think it'll be very obvious. However I think we do a little subtleties here and there. I don't know if you catch up on them but whenever Jasper meets Bella for the first time inside the Cullen house, there's a little bit of a moment. It's a slight, very subtle thing that Catherine [Hardwicke] worked on with all of us.


It's not something that you can outwardly show anyway.
Jackson Rathbone: You know, it has to do with other people. It's the ability to manipulate emotions. Maybe if turned around they'd yell all scream.


Are you tired of signing your autograph yet?
Jackson Rathbone: You know, no, but I think my hands have gone numb.


So why do you think people love Twilight so much?
Jackson Rathbone: I think everybody's always attracted to the vampire genre. I've always been, myself. And the mythology of being immortal and invulnerable basically, it's something extreme. I've always been attracted to extremes in life and in stories and art. I think that's why people are here because it's extreme yet at the same time, it's grounded in morality.


Did you miss not having fangs?
Jackson Rathbone: You know, I was worried because that was going to be a mess. I'd be talking like this the entire time. I have fangs in my mouth and I can't speak properly. No, no, no. We all talked about that and we're really happy because it makes it more realistic, a little bit more modern, you know?


Why does it make it more modern?
Jackson Rathbone: Because it's always been the old fairy tale that Nosferatu has these long fangs or Buffy the Vampire Slayer where their faces go and the forehead and the teeth grow out. So it's like we're in a new age, a new age that says, 'Hey, you've got some pretty nice canines. I've got some pretty good canines. We can sink our teeth into some flesh. We could do some damage, couldn't we?'


Are you ready for New Moon?
Jackson Rathbone: I don't know if anybody is. I don't know what's going on with it. I think that we're going to wait until tonight and then we're going to figure that all out.


But you're hoping?
Jackson Rathbone: Of course. Yeah.








lunes, 2 de marzo de 2009

Kellan Lutz Interview.


Kellan Lutz (Emmett Cullen) admitted to being overwhelmed by the response of fans at the Los Angeles premiere of Summit Entertainment's Twilight. Lutz has been out and about so he knows how passionate the supporters of Stephenie Meyer's Twilight book series are, yet the response in LA caught him a little by surprise.



Good to see you again. So are you tired of doing your autograph?
Kellan Lutz: Never. I don't want to see the movie. I just want to keep on going around and around.


You know they would love it if you did that?
Kellan Lutz: I know. I know.


Did you expect this? I mean you've see the fan reaction already, but this?
Kellan Lutz: No, not at all. This is…I still haven't had time to take it in. It's very humbling to be a part of it and to sign so many things. And especially to have fans make posters for us. That's really cool.


People yelling out your name…
Kellan Lutz: Yeah, yeah. And they get it right actually. No Keelans or Kielans.

So tell me, these fans have huge expectations. The movie's going to live up to it, right?
Kellan Lutz: I hope so. I haven't seen it yet so I really can't wait.


Why haven't you seen it yet?
Kellan Lutz: I don't know. No one likes me. No one invites me to these screenings. I've been out of time every time. I think a part of me really wanted to wait and just see it with all the fans, and experience it the best way I could and that's right now, tonight.


Tell me about bonding as the Cullen family.
Kellan Lutz: I mean, I had the honor to work with a bunch of my friends who I'd been friends with previously. And, you know, just work with our shooting schedule which was only like 8 hours a day versus the 14… We had a lot of time to mingle and to talk and to get dinners. We really grew super close.


But you had a really short shooting schedule too, only 44 days.
Kellan Lutz: But we still, most of us live in LA so we're here to hang out.


What was it like on that set with the weather and everything else?
Kellan Lutz: I love the weather. That was my favorite part of it. I'm from the Midwest so I love the hail, the rain. While everyone else is trying to get warm in the camping tent, I'm out there just running around, eating the hail. It was fun.


Are you ready for New Moon?
Kellan Lutz: So am, so am.


If they started getting ready in January, you'd be there?
Kellan Lutz: I'm just in my bed, waiting.







domingo, 1 de marzo de 2009

Kristen Stewart and Ashley Greene Interviews.



Kristen Stewart (Bella) and Ashley Greene (Alice) hit the red carpet for the Los Angeles premiere of Summit Entertainment's Twilight looking gorgeous and ready to show the film off to Twilight supporters. Stewart and Greene were surrounded by the rest of the Twilight cast as well as a thousand or so fans who could not get enough of the actors who are bringing their favorite characters to life.


Kristen Stewart: Bella in Twilight.
How are you handling this mob of fans?
Kristen Stewart: I mean we were prepared. We were told. I understand why these guys are so passionate and hardcore. The book is sort of hardcore.

How is it for you to take on a franchise like this?
Kristen Stewart: Fine. I mean, I didn't even know it was going to be a franchise. I was totally compelled by the character in the book. It's oddly engaging and it's very fundamental. And it sort of has everything that a young girl would sort of connect with. And you have a really strong female lead, it's sort of complicated and really crazy and scary and convoluted and sexy at the same time."
Ashley Greene: Alice in Twilight.
Ashley Greene: Oh my god! It's quite amazing. It's a really great feeling to walk in there and have people chanting your name and be just as passionate about a film as I am.

What is so unique about the story that makes all these people come out?
Ashley Greene: One, for the guys it's a different kind of vampire story and it does have the sports and the fight scenes and all those elements. But when it boils down to it, it's a really kind of epic love story. It's the story about two people who just can't bear to be away from each other and I think everybody wants that, and everybody relates to that. And then you throw in the superhero powers and the glory of being a vampire and it just hits on every level.

That complicates things though.
Ashley Greene: It's a layered, complicated story.

Why do you think so many people love Alice?
Ashley Greene: She's so loveable. No, I mean she's just extremely happy to be alive, or be being – I don't know if alive is the right word – and to have a family who loves her. And she's kind of out for the better good, even though she is a vampire, of other people in her family. And she's just upbeat and happy, and then she has this kick ass power of being able to see the future. I don't think that hurts either.

What were your feelings while you read the books?
Ashley Greene: You know, I was in love with Edward, too. I'm not going to lie. I was like, 'Where is this guy? Where does he exist? Where can I find him?' So I was just in love with the story as everybody else, and then I got to film it. It's been amazing.

sábado, 28 de febrero de 2009

Rachelle Lefevre and Cam Gigandet Interviews.




Rachelle Lefevre and Cam Gigandet play Victoria and James, two of the bad vampires in Summit Entertainment's Twilight, based on bestselling book by Stephenie Meyer. Although they're the bad guys in the movie, the thousand or so fans who turned up at the Los Angeles premiere of Twilight didn't hold their roles against them. Lefevre and Gigandet were cheered on by the passionate crowd of Twilight followers right along with the rest of the cast.


Rachelle Lefevre: Victoria in Twilight.


Rachelle Lefevre: Oh my goodness, hello everybody.

It's kind of an onslaught tonight.
Rachelle Lefevre: It is, it is.

What do you make of it?
Rachelle Lefevre: You know what? It's incredible. We started to get some idea of the fan sort of frenzy at Comic Con, but I don't think that anybody could have anticipated this. I certainly never thought I'd be a part of anything where people were sleeping on concrete to get a look at us.

Why do you think this is such an international phenomenon?
Rachelle Lefevre: I think that the story is just so universal. Romeo and Juliet comes to mind. You know, it's survived 500 years. It's been translated into, I don't know, 8000 languages. I think that love stories are timeless and when they're done right, they appeal to everybody. That's the brilliance of it is that because they're vampires, it also adds this really dark element and allows for a lot of action, too. And so in addition to having this great romance, you have fight sequences and chase scenes and real, real sort of intensity. It's a real ride, this film.
Is there anything in your past that you would have slept out overnight to see?
Rachelle Lefevre: You know what? I was very, very young but I remember the New Kids on the Block being like… I think I sort of liked boys for the first time, you know? And going, 'What's this all about?' I just wanted Joey McIntyre to sing to me.

Maybe he will now.
Rachelle Lefevre: Maybe he will now. Joey, will you sing to me?



Cam Gigandet: James in Twilight.


Cam Gigandet: This is…it's just so unreal, really. I feel like they're going to call cut and we're going to like, 'Let's do it again.' It's like a movie, really.

I'm sure you anticipated quite a crowd but does this exceed it?
Cam Gigandet: You can never really… I mean, you can hope for the best. But I never would have expected this. This is just wild. Wild.

How did Twilight become such a pop culture phenomenon?
Cam Gigandet: How? It's got the best of both worlds. It has like this dark mystery with these vampires. But then it's like a relatable love story that you've seen. It's like an old classic love story so, you know, those two combined.

How much fun is it to play the bad guy?
Cam Gigandet: I love it.

They keep casting you that way.
Cam Gigandet: I know, but it's just so much fun because you have unlimited amounts of freedom and I think that's why I like it.










martes, 24 de febrero de 2009

Taylor Lautner and Solomon Trimble Interviews.

Taylor Lautner (Jacob) and Solomon Trimble (Sam) don't have a lot to do in Twilight, the movie based on bestselling book by Stephenie Meyer, but Twilight readers all know both Jacob and Sam play important roles in the sequels to Twilight - New Moon, Eclipse, and Breaking Dawn. And at Twilight's Los Angeles premiere both Lautner and Trimble said they're definitely ready for New Moon whenever Summit Entertainment, the studio behind Twilight, tells them it's moving forward.



Taylor Lautner: Jacob in Twilight.


What's the appeal of Twilight?

Taylor Lautner: All of the fans can relate to the characters. I mean, a lot of our fans are in high school so they can relate. The other thing is it's a romance. The girls love the romance. But it's not only a romance – it's an action romance. So I think the movie is for everyone. It's got romance, action, horror, it's got everything.


Have you had any strange fan encounters while out on the Twilight tour?
Taylor Lautner: The tour, it wasn't bad. But actually just over here there was some middle-aged woman. She's like, 'Guess what Taylor? I'm wearing the Team Taylor panties!' I'm like, 'No way.' And she's like, 'Would you mind signing them?' And luckily my publicist was right there and she's like, 'We've got to go do an interview.' And I'm like, 'Okay, yeah, I'll think about that one.'

Would you have done it if you hadn't been pulled away?
Taylor Lautner: Maybe. I don't know. No, I'm kidding. No!

Are you ready for New Moon?
Taylor Lautner: I am. That's why I'm telling all my fans see it three times and we should be good.

What do you think of the vampire versus werewolf issue?
Taylor Lautner: Personally, I don't get the vampire thing. They're cold; werewolves are hot. I mean, cold, hot, come on! And I think Bella is just confused at the moment. She doesn't know what's best for her and the Team Edward fans, but they'll come around. They'll come around.

There are a lot of Team Jacob fans.
Taylor Lautner: I was surprised. There are a lot more than I expected. It's awesome. I love just diving into the crowd and giving them hugs. It's fun.





Solomon Trimble: Sam in Twilight.


How are you doing?
Solomon Trimble: I'm doing really well.


Are you eating this up because it looks like you're having a good time?
Solomon Trimble: I am.

So how are you at signing your autograph?
Solomon Trimble: I'm getting tennis elbow. This is new. No, I'm doing pretty good. When I first started it just wasn't good. Now my signature's got a little flow to it. The faster I go, the better it is.


Did you practice?
Solomon Trimble: Yeah, I did, twice. Just once before for friends and then yesterday at Borders. There was a podcast and a signing with some of the cast there. That was only 200 people and I remember thinking my arm hurts and they said, 'Wait till tomorrow.'


Maybe you should just do your initials?
Solomon Trimble: I thought about that but it's too quick. It just looks like, I don't know, like Stonehenge. It's bad.


So you didn't know about Twilight, right, going into this?
Solomon Trimble: My sister in law she was a crazy Twilight fan.


And then the screaming really kicks up because Robert Pattinson has made an appearance.
Now go.

Solomon Trimble: She was a crazy fan and when I got cast I tried telling her, 'Yeah, I got cast as Sam Uley.' She thought I was lying, made it up. I'm like, 'Twilight, isn't this the book?' I knew quotes before I even read the book or was cast because she was so into it. And then, yeah, when she saw that I had the script she tried to rip it from me. I got a scar on my neck. She didn't get it.


So the next one, you should play a next bigger part, right?
Solomon Trimble: Yeah, my schedule is open. I'll just say that. I have no idea what's going on but yeah, my schedule's open.


Are you buffing up?
Solomon Trimble: Yes, I'm buffing up. I'm eating nothing but chicken and salmon and lifting heavy metal. The Twilight Awesomes are a group. They bought a gym membership. I went to my gym and like out of the blue they're like, 'Oh, you're three months ahead,' because I went to pay. It's like, 'Really?' And then I get this card for my birthday and they were like, 'Hey, we want Sam to be buff…' It's kind of a backhanded way to… I was like, 'Thank you Miss Jan and everybody in Twilight Awesomes.' Thank you.





lunes, 23 de febrero de 2009

'Twilight' star finds uneasy fit with fame.


"Twilight" star Rob Pattinson was only a short time into his heartthrob publicity tour when he arrived in Philadelphia last week, and the magnitude of his role as teenage vampire Edward Cullen was already getting to him. Not quite a typical It guy, the 22-year-old actor wasn't exactly oozing charisma or confidence.
In two hours he would be facing 1,000 shrieking fans at the King of Prussia Mall, but in his suite at the Four Seasons Hotel he cringed at every mention of the word fame.
The London-born actor bashfully stared at the floor and ran his fingers through his now infamous hair as he answered questions about the cultlike following of "Twilight"-obsessed teenage girls and their mothers.
"It's really strange when you go from like no one caring to people going like, 'Oh yeah, I saw that guy from 'Twilight' being an idiot.' I mean, it's strange," Pattinson mused. Refusing to make eye contact or even use the first person when discussing his outrageously successful press tour, Pattinson tried to disassociate himself from his character.
But that might be impossible.
Thanks to his role as Edward, Pattinson has already attracted a fan base of thousands of teenage girls willing to camp out in the rain for hours for a two-second encounter.
He is trying not to let it go to his head.
"So many young people who get a big hit kind of get hyped up," he said. "They start to believe their own hype and then everyone starts to, like, cut them down immediately. And I just feel like I'm being propelled by something I have absolutely no control over.
" . . . I always feel like I'm going to get my head cut off."
The intensity of the past few weeks confuses him. Dressed in black jeans, a nondescript black jacket, black leather Nikes and a white(ish) T-shirt, Pattinson looks more like a gawky, shy, awkward teen (albeit with perfect bone structure and no acne) than the brooding vampire the "Twilight" legion wants him to be.
He got a taste of life in the spotlight after playing Cedric Diggory in two Harry Potter movies, but then he "squandered away" his Harry Potter momentum and just hung out with some L.A. waitresses until returning home to London. That's where he was when he landed "Twilight," living with his best friend in a tiny apartment with one chair, a TV, and homemade furniture.
"It was so cool," he said nostalgically. "You had to walk through a restaurant kitchen to get up to the roofs but you could like walk along all the roofs . . . I didn't do anything for a year, I just sat on the roof and played music . . . it was like the best time I had ever had.
"I never set out to be an actor," Pattinson offered as an explanation of why he isn't worried about failing. "Though I'd be quite annoyed if it fell apart, because I quite enjoy doing it."
Before acting, he imagined a very different life. Pattinson planned on going to the prestigious London School of Economics to study international relations and politics. He ended up making Harry Potter movies instead, which gobbled up years of his teen life.
"It went on for so long," he said, "I didn't have to decide what to do and I didn't have to do any exams or anything. It seemed like a really easy option."
After his time off "doing nothing," Pattinson tried to reignite his acting career in part because he needed some structure.
"I guess I must have matured a little bit last year," Pattinson reflected, laughing. "And I guess maybe I missed school and I missed kind of working in a structured way and so I started looking at scripts and acting in a very structured way. I forced myself to feel like I was working."
Besides the movie-star thing, Pattinson is also trying screenwriting. He has already written a few scripts, the most recent one about the slave trade. And he wants to have a production company by the time he is 26.
"I guess I'm just a control freak," he said. "I don't like the way the film industry is . . . If you come with a good script and then it goes to the studios and gets financing, it all gets changed because they want to make money. And it's like, how do you know if it's going to make money or not? All you're doing is making it generic when you do that, and making it generic is no guarantee that it's going to make money either.
"The only way to abandon that is to take risks," he added passionately. "And you need to be able to trust people. So you get a company together with people you know are good and you know work hard and you can make good stuff. That's kind of what I want to do."
But for now, Pattinson must get through the "Twilight" of his young career.
He said all the press is tiring and he has "an overwhelming urge to say something really terrible" every time he has to face 1,000 screaming 14-year-olds. He has been traveling with the same bag of clothes since he was in Italy almost a month ago.
"It's weird how odd your clothes start to smell," he confessed, half-seriously.
His character's loner image seems to ring true in his own personal life as well.
"I'm good at disappearing," he said. "I don't have too much of a problem with it. There's hardly anyone I want to speak to . . . I spend most of the time just avoiding phone calls, just avoiding everything."






viernes, 20 de febrero de 2009

Twilight star 'doesn't like attention'.




Vampire movie Twilight has broken box office records in America and is set to do the same in the UK. Actor Robert Pattinson was amongst cast members in London for the UK premiere. Newsbeat caught up with him to find out why he's camera shy, how he copes with hordes of screaming fans and what it would take to get him wandering around naked.




It's a bit crazy what's been happening around Twilight, isn't it?
It's a little bit over the top. I feel the same in my head I guess. I was quite a paranoid person anyway, so it doesn't really feed well when people are looking at you. I'm not really in the right job. I don't like having my photo taken. I don't like the attention.
Do you have fans following you around?
Whenever I have to do anything fan-related there's always a whole bunch of people. My brain kind of shuts down when there are loads of people screaming at me. I'm not thinking at all so I can't really remember what's happened immediately afterwards.
There are stories in the papers about a multi-million pound deal for appearing in the rest of the Twilight series. Are they true?
I read some gossip thing saying, because I looked really uncomfortable in a paparazzi photo or something, they're like, He should get used to it. That's the price to pay if you're getting $12m (£8.1m) a movie. If I'm getting paid $12m a movie I'd walk around naked. That's all nonsense. I don't know who makes that stuff up. Even the price for the first one was nonsense.
Are you doing the next two films?
I went into it doing it as a trilogy. They're shooting the second one in March. I'm not really in it that much in the second one. The lead character is somebody else, which is another reason why I'm not being paid $12m. I've got two scenes.
People are calling you the next Jude Law. Do those claims sit comfortably with you?
No. The same thing happened with Harry Potter. You get a bit of heat and everybody says you're this, you're that. Then it dies down. You just do jobs. I don't know any actor who's followed through, when they say he's the next this and then he actually has become the next that. I don't get that. I don't see what the point is.
How do you cope with the screaming fans at premieres?
I'm not particularly good at coping with it. I just cope. I just leave my brain at the door and just stand there. I can get the screaming more than I get the photo things. That's the worst, when you have this wall of photographers. I've never understood the logic in how they do it. Everybody shouts at the same time, and you're trying to do a logical thing, looking from the left to the right. And they almost always end up looking disappointed with you afterwards.
Did you ever imagine that girls would be obsessed with your hair?
That's the weirdest thing ever. I don't get that at all. It's really strange.
A lot of the gossip websites seem to have an obsession with you as well, don't they?
I think someone follows me. They do the most random stuff. I get a photo taken through a burger drive-through window and it's like, What?. They always seem like they're six feet away. I don't understand. I'm walking around and I don't see anybody.







jueves, 19 de febrero de 2009

Twilight premiere: fans brave cold to see Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart.




The 22-year-old English actor plays vampire Edward Cullen in the film, which has been touted as the "girl's answer to Harry Potter".
He was joined on the red carpet by co-star Kristen Stewart, who plays his teenage love interest Isabella Swan. Stewart, 18, arrived at the West End Vue Cinema in London's Leicester Square wearing a single-strap blue dress, apparently unconcerned about the bitter temperatures.
Twilight is based on the series of books by Mormon housewife-turned-author Stephanie Meyer which have sold around 14 million copies across the world.
The film, which raked in £24 million ($35.7 million) on its opening day in the US last month, is expected to catapult Pattinson – who played Hogwarts pupil Cedric Diggory in the Harry Potter films – to international heart-throb status.
Pattinson was raised in Barnes, west London, and first trod the boards in Guys and Dolls at his local theatre group seven years ago.
In Twilight he stars as Cullen, a 108-year-old vampire who looks like a teenager and wins the heart of Stewart's character when she moves to his hometown of Forks, Washington.
The film, directed by Catherine Hardwicke, opens in cinemas in the UK on Dec 19.




miércoles, 18 de febrero de 2009

Twilight-mania, Robert Pattinson, invade Boston area.




Blast releases a special TWILIGHT EXTRA issue of the magazine on Monday with photos and video from the event, a longer interview with Robert Pattinson, our movie review, and more!

SAUGUS, Mass. — The teenage girl came out of the Hot Topic store, eyes glazed with a silly smile on her face. Her mother ran up to meet her, just as the words started tumbling out of the daughter’s lips.

He talked to me, she gasped, as her mother smiled along but tried to calm the teen down.

She has epilepsy, the mother explained, and I don’t want her to seize.

Then she scooped up her daughter and hurried away, without giving her name, to make room for the next giggling girl.

Fan dedication: defined.

She was just one of hundreds who flocked to the Square One Mall north of Boston on Friday. The object of their fanaticism wasn’t one of the Jonas Brothers or Miley Cyrus, but rather a soft-spoken, spiky-haired Brit named Robert Pattinson.

In the words of one indignant passerby who was turned away from shopping at the barricaded Hot Topic: He isn’t even famous.

Though Pattinson, 22, may not be a household name yet, to the fan community of Stephenie Meyer’s vampire Twilight series, (and hardcore Harry Potter fans who remember he played Cedric Diggory) he is second to none. Playing the lead male character Edward in the upcoming vampire film Twilight, the fan hysteria has reached peak heights.

At first I thought maybe he wasn’t as good for Edward, but now I think he’s perfect, said Selys Rivera, 14, of Worcester. He’s completely perfect for Edward. He’s amazing.

Pattinson, along with co-stars Kristen Stewart, Taylor Lautner, Edi Gathegi and Rachelle Lefavre, is headlining the Hot Topic-sponsored movie tour to promote Twilight in the final days before the film’s release on November 21. The Saugus event was Pattinson’s third and final stop on the tour after the event scheduled in San Francisco was canceled after fans mobbed the mall.

Pattinson, Stewart, and the trio of Lautner, Gathegi and Lefavre toured to 13 cities across the U.S. from November 10 through November 15.

[The hysteria] hasn’t died down at all, Pattinson told Blast in a brief interview at the Saugus Hot Topic. It happened in [Italy], it happened in Mexico. It’s completely ridiculous.

Here in Saugus, the crowd was much tamer than the events in San Francisco and Chicago. Wristbands were given, starting at 9 p.m. Thursday, to the first 500 people who bought the Hot Topic official “Twilight” tour T-shirt. The Saugus police were no-nonsense about the event and were a steady presence around the mall throughout the night.

We got here at about 9 p.m. yesterday and we were there like all night long, said Attleboro resident Amanda Pease, 20. We only left to go to Starbucks.

At 5 p.m. Friday, a crowd of a couple hundred girls had gathered around a stage that was set up for Pattinson to speak to the fans for the question and answer portion of the event. Some had camped out for more than 20 hours just for the chance to meet their beloved Edward, while others had arrived only moments before to wait around until Pattinson spoke at on the stage.

A security presence was felt. A barricade was set up like a moat around the stage to protect Pattinson from the overzealousness of any rabid fan-girls.

Blast has not heard reports of any of the other Twilight character events going as wildly insane as Pattinson’s. His response to questions about whether he had talked to his fellow cast members since the tour began: I haven’t actually. Do you how they’re [events are] going?

A couple minutes after 6 p.m., the fans started to trickle out of the store with awe-struck faces and trembling hands.I went up there and he was so nice. He actually asked me like how everything has been and whether I was okay, and I was just like so speechless. I was just like, ‘I love you so much and I can’t wait to see you in the movie! I can’t wait to see you in all of your movies!’ said Pease, who admitted that she had not known Pattinson had acted in any other movie other than Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.

Pease’s boyfriend, Bill Brauneis, 21, of Attleboro was a bit more conservative with his enthusiasm about seeing Pattinson.

It was great. I was looking forward to meeting him, he said.

The fan reactions were noted, even by the authorities that were there for security.

They all came out like zombies, like they’d been bit by a vampire,” said Saugus fire Lieutenant Eric Hansen.

Television crews swarmed on girl after girl who came out sobbing hysterically in the aftermath of meeting Pattinson. A couple kind words from the actor were translated into confessions of attraction and admissions of love.

One girl walked up to her group of friends after exiting the Hot Topic with a giddy smile on her face, whispered I told him I loved him, and burst into a bout of giggles.

He’s cuter in person, another girl proclaimed to the next batch of fans waiting to be admitted into the Hot Topic.

Pattinson said that when he was first cast into the role of Edward, he did not realize how big the Twilight phenomenon truly was.

If I was doing [the movie] now, knowing it was going to be this audience, I think I probably would have done it differently, said Pattinson. But I think, at the end of the day, it’s a good thing I went into it thinking [Twilight] is a small thing because it essentially is. It’s a small story; it’s an intimate story, and I think it comes across as being very human rather than being a big epic thing.

There is a lot of pressure on the actors and creators of the film adaptation of Twilight to get everything perfectly right for the fans who will scrutinize every detail of the film to see how it compares to the novel.

Most fans said that they liked all the clips of the film they had seen thus far, but 25-year-old Sarah Kontos of Worcester said that the raciness of the Bella and Edward make-out scene, shown in Summit’s final Twilight trailer, gave her pause.

In the book, she wears like ratty old pajama pants with holes in them, and she’s not like sexy, so it was weird to see that in one of the trailers, said Kontos. I kind of was mad. That would give people who didn’t read the book a totally wrong impression of that part.

Director Catherine Hardwicke has said in interviews that Stephenie Meyer, the author of the Twilight series, asked her to tone down the make-out scene that was originally shot because she would have nothing to work with in the later adaptations of the novel.

As the crowds waiting for their signed posters thinned out, the police presence in front of the Hot Topic grew from three to 12 officers. Echoes of Robert! Robert! could be heard throughout the mall as the clock struck 7:30 p.m. and the fans gathered around the stage shouted impatiently for the culmination of their long wait. Though Pattinson was escorted through back passageways to get to the stage, a large crowd of fans who were not among the lucky 500 to meet Pattinson gathered around the entrance to the Hot Topic on the off chance that he would pass by them.

As soon as Pattinson appeared on the stage for the question and answer session, the chatter turned to a unified shrieking scream that thundered around the interior of the mall. Lieutenant Hansen had to plug his fingers in his ears to dull out the ear-piercing sound of what is sure to be the high point in some of the fans’ teenage lives.

The questions were submitted by fans earlier in the day and were handpicked by Pattinson. Pattinson may not be known universally, like Brad Pitt or Michael Jackson, but the obsession that surrounds him by his dedicated fan base is enough to counter the indifference of the general public. If Twilight is a success when it is released on Friday, the name Pattinson will be sure to mean something.

Though his initial popularity is based on his role in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, and now Edward Cullen in Twilight, Pattinson has directed his focus toward indie films. His next major role is in the drama How To Be.





sábado, 17 de enero de 2009

Shia LaBeouf, Zac Efron and Robert Pattinson: Top hunks.


Shia LaBeouf, Zac Efron and Robert Pattinson have been named among the top 10 hunks of 2008.
The ‘Indiana Jones’ actor has made the list compiled by website ETonline to find the best looking men of the year.
Other stars to be recognized for their handsome features include American football quarterback Tony Romo, the boyfriend of Jessica Simpson, actor Adam Rodriguez and ‘Pineapple Express’ star James Franco. Reduce Expenses and Save up to $800 on Auto Insurance How to View Your Credit Report and Scores for Free $2 Million in Scholarships for Working Parents Going Back to School
‘Twilight’ star Robert admits he is finding it hard to come to terms with his new sex symbol status, especially as he still has difficulties finding women who are willing to date him.
The 22-year-old actor said: “I am single at the moment but I read stories in the magazines and papers that I am dating so and so or I am dating so and so. But it's not true. But they are very good guesses because I always fancy the girl they pair me up with.
“I'm hoping it's the girl herself who has made it up - then I'm in with a real chance. Maybe I should start getting in contact with them.”
ET’s Top 10 hunks of 2008:


  1. Robert Pattinson

  2. Zac Efron

  3. Tony Romo

  4. Reggie Bush

  5. Shia LaBeouf

  6. Adam Rodriguez

  7. Chris Pine

  8. James Franco

  9. Jay Hernandez

  10. Simon Baker






viernes, 16 de enero de 2009

Bradley in the Twilight zone.

Twilight has turned a spotlight on North Vancouver singer-songwriter Sam Bradley, thanks in part to his boyhood friendship with actor Robert Pattinson, who plays the hit movie's lead vampire.North Vancouver's Sam Bradley, a childhood friend of star Robert Pattinson, has a tune on the movie Twilight's soundtrack.Bradley and Pattinson wrote the song "Never Think" together, and Bradley is now reaping the benefits after Pattinson's recording of the song was included on the movie's mega-selling soundtrack CD."What it does for me is, I'm going to be able to get a publishing deal," says the 22-year-old Bradley, who moved with his mother and sister from Britain to North Van when he was 17. "I'm going to be able to fund my own album. It's a big deal, the fact that the soundtrack went to No. 1 on the Billboard charts, that really works in my favour."Pattinson and Bradley became friends as 12-year-old schoolboys in London's Hammersmith area, staying in touch as Pattinson's acting career took off and Bradley moved to Canada. Bradley joined his friend in Los Angeles earlier this month for Twilight's premiere screening."It was pretty crazy, late-night car chases, paparazzi. Robert is just huge there, it's ridiculous," Bradley says.The movie, based on Stephenie Meyer's hugely popular novel about a small-town high school girl who falls in love with a vampire classmate, stars Kristen Stewart alongside Pattinson. Word that the novel was being made into a movie drew feverish attention from Twilight fans long before the movie was even finished, and police have been called out to control the fan hysteria at some of Pattinson's public appearances.Bradley, who stayed with Pattinson at the actor's London apartment for six months last year, has had a front-row seat at his pal's career rise. Bradley was in England four years ago when Pattinson was cast as doomed wizard Cedric Diggory in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, a small sample of what was to come, as it turned out."I'd never heard of Twilight and neither had he," says Bradley. "He told me as soon as he got it. He was just concentrating on making it as good as he could. What he said mostly was that he was going to be closer to Vancouver."Twilight filmed in rural Oregon earlier this year and Pattinson visited his friend in Vancouver during filming breaks. The two wrote the song together a year ago, and Bradley has 25 other songs he plans to record at North Vancouver's Baker Street studios. But first he'll head to London for 10 days next month to visit old friends and to attend Twilight's U.K. premiere."It's bizarre, but we kind of all planned it, this was our idea," says Bradley of the small group of school friends that also includes rising British actor Tom Sturridge. "It was our idea that they would be making movies and I would be making music. So when Twilight happened, it was kind of like, oh, it's starting."Bradley has put together a band with some Canadian musicians -- they're playing a New Year's Eve gig at Sailor Hagar's pub in North Vancouver.



FUENTE.

jueves, 15 de enero de 2009

Robert Pattinson's fan shock.


Robert Pattinson is amazed by his new fan base.
The British actor has regularly been mobbed by fans in America as he promotes his new movie 'Twilight' - based on the cult books by Stephanie Meyer - and admits he was unprepared for the near-hysterical response he gets almost everywhere he goes.
Click here to see all the Robert Pattinson photos >
He said: "I went into it as a normal job - I mean it was just an audition and then it became this thing incrementally over the last few months.
"And every day that goes past it seems to get a hundred times bigger. Nothing surprises me to do with 'Twilight' any more.
"It's the most distracting thing in the world."
Although the books are cult favourites in the US, they are not as popular in the 'Harry Potter' star's native UK and he admits he is interested to see the response he gets when he returns home for the film's British premiere next month.
He added to BBC Newsbeat: "I'm curious to see what happens in England because in all this madness I think I can always go home to England and it'll all turn off."




miércoles, 14 de enero de 2009

Twilight zone of screaming adulation.


LOS ANGELES, California—This is the hot young actor that girls are screaming their tonsils out for?
Some reporters couldn’t reconcile Robert Pattinson who looked like he just got out of bed, his hair a thick mess, with the buzz—screaming hysteria, to be more specific—proclaiming him as Hollywood’s new It Guy. But when we first interviewed him on the set of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire in the UK several years ago, we knew it was only a matter of time before Robert graduated from small roles like Cedric Diggory to a star-launching gig like Twilight. Tall, blessed with patrician good looks, Robert stood out among the Harry Potter cast.
Kristen Stewart offered the most astute observation about her Twilight co-star: Rob is very organic. He’s in the moment and he lets it happen which is brave ... He’s a courageous actor.
As predicted, Twilight, where Robert and Kristen play Edward and Bella, respectively in the film adaptation of Stephenie Meyer’s hit novel of the same name, topped the box-office last weekend. The movie about a high school girl who falls in love with a vampire grossed over $70 million.
Below are excerpts of our separate interviews with Robert and Kristen.


Robert Pattinson:

How would you describe your life now?
I’ve been involved in Twilight all year now. I’ve been doing press for several weeks so I haven’t really had time to reflect on what my life actually is. It would be very strange being locked in a thing where I go into lots of different rooms and lots of little girls scream at me all the time (laughter). I would probably get old after a while. I think 32 is going to be my year. That’s the year I’ve always been looking forward to. I don’t know why (laughter).


How old are you now?

Twenty-two.

This movie is about obsessive love. Have you ever experienced it?
Yeah, sort of. I remember there was a girl I was totally obsessed with for about 10 years.

Ten years is a long time.
Yeah, but it’s like I never ever spoke to her. I think that’s the best type of love (laughter). I remember when reading my diaries from the time—whenever anything else would mess up with a girl, I’d be like, she’d better be worth it. When it happens, you can always have this kind of hope and then when I finally told her she was like, You’ve never spoken to me in my whole life. You’ve only spoken to me about three times and never said anything nice (laughter).

Are you still in a band?
I was in a band years ago. Not like a proper band but I had kind of roll-on, roll-off musicians. I still try and play but it’s weird now since when I’m trying to do it as an actor, it always seems kind of cheesy. I liked playing at open mikes in bars and stuff because it was the only time I really felt free. I did a couple of gigs in LA and people filmed and put them on the Internet. It just ruins the whole experience. You’re like Oh, that wasn’t the point. So I stopped. I’m going to wait for all this to die down before I start doing live gigs again.


What is your home life like?
In LA, it basically consists of waiting for my phone to ring (laughter), reading scripts and that’s about it (laughter). In London, I could replace scripts for books and I just watch a lot of movies. I have very few hobbies (laughter).

Can you tell us more about your family background?
My dad is from Yorkshire and he did a bunch of things. In the ’70s, he moved to America for a bit and just worked as a taxi driver. Then he started selling cars in the ’80s. My mom worked as a booker at a modeling agency and now they’re both retired. My mom, sisters and I speak really well. My parents were just very aware of how you’re treated differently in the world if you speak articulately. So it was just the way I was brought up.


Do you believe in having a soul mate?
I hope there is such a thing. I guess it would be quite scary to find a soul mate when you’re young because you’re probably going to mess it up (laughter).

How have you embraced the thought that you’re a sex symbol now?
It’s strange because I’m a sex symbol to 14-year-old girls (laughter) which I guess is not the most helpful situation to be in. But yeah, I’ve never really thought of it. It’s just so funny. I mean, just last year I couldn’t even get a date (laughter) and then this year, the world turns and it’s so bizarre (laughter) that everybody just changes their mind at the same time (laughter).


You couldn’t get a date?
When I was in London, it was like, not at all. I don’t know why. That’s all I talked about the whole of last year—that I need to get a girlfriend. I need to get a girlfriend and then this year, I could have any 12-year-old I wanted (laughter).


What do you look for in a girl?
I’m always shocked by the people who I’m attracted to. It’s always completely random. I generally like people who are a bit crazy but yeah, that’s pretty much my only prerequisite.


You get to run up a tree, among other special things. How did you achieve some of these effects?
I can’t even walk in a straight line so it was very tough doing all that type of stuff. It was designed like in a kung fu movie in a lot of sequences. That was tough—virtually anything to do on a harness because you have to exert so much effort just maintaining your center of gravity. It’s tougher especially when you have to make it look effortless and not breath as well (laughter). That was probably the hardest thing I had to do in the movie.

How long did you rehearse for stunts that required wire work?
Not a huge amount of time. About two weeks, I guess, and I had to do a ton of it as well.


What kind of music do you listen to?
I don’t know much about contemporary music. I do have an iPod but I listen to a lot of old blues. I listen to John Lee Hooker and Elmore James. I have been listening to them for years. I was obsessed with Van Morrison for years. I went to see him recently where he performed Astral Weeks. I just spent the entire night crying (laughter) but I was really obsessed with Van Morrison.


Were you a rebellious teenager?
I really wasn’t very much of a rebel. I’m seen by people now as more of a rebel which is strange. I don’t like doing what people tell me to do. I don’t deliberately rebel against them.


How did you evoke sexiness in this role?
A lot of it has to do with not speaking—like that always makes somebody more attractive. I wasn’t really trying to play Edward as a sexy guy, though. He’s not very sexy in the book. It’s like he’s just kind of mysterious and his whole personality works from a template. So it creates more mystery and whatever he says seems very contrived. He always has a completely opposite thought to what he’s saying in his head. He’s always hiding things. A lot of the attraction to someone is always frustration and that’s what a lot of the story is.


What concerns you most about this sudden fame?
When something or someone is hyped and you’re put on the forefront of a lot of things, people want to tear you down. That’s kind of scary, especially when you’re not really putting yourself out there.



Kristen Stewart:


Have you had crushes that became obsessions?
I feel like most crushes are fairly obsessive—for me at least. I have experienced them.

At what age?
Oh my God, I started having some crushes on people when I was five, I think (laughter).

Your character kind of takes care of her mom. How is your own relationship with your mother?
My mom is a momma bear. She’s the caretaker but in a sort of nonmaternal way. I have a lot of brothers who aren’t my biological brothers. We take in strays but I’m friends with my mom. The one thing that Bella is not getting from her mom is that her mother is not being a mom. She’s just a buddy and you don’t need a friend in a mom always. I mean, that could be a good part of it but you need more than that and I have both parts in my mom.


Tell us more about your mother taking in strays. That sounds exciting.
She’s just taking in friends that I’ve acquired who just don’t have it easy in their own homes. That’s really great. I just did a movie called Welcome to the Rileys where I play a homeless kid. She’s squatting in a house at the time that you see her in the movie. She’s essentially homeless and it’s this entire counterculture that I was completely unaware of—runaways and people, kids particularly, who live on the streets.


So your mother rehabilitates them and they go back…
No, these are my brothers. We keep them. These are my best friends (laughter). Yeah, we keep them.


What did Robert bring to the table? How did you arrive at that chemistry between the two of you?
Rob came into the audition looking sort of terrified, like a subdued fear and pained. The pain was just very evident in him. I am not saying it’s in Rob but he knew what to bring to that character. We didn’t need the statuesque, model-types who come in and just pose. I couldn’t see any of the other guys. They weren’t even looking at me. It was like they were focusing on their lines but Rob is very organic. He’s in the moment and he lets it happen which is brave. He’s brave. He’s a courageous actor.


How much training did you have to undergo for the stunts which required wire work?
I didn’t have much training. I was trained to hold onto Rob (laughter). It was like I didn’t really have to do much else. I was always trying to make it easier for him because he’s always found it very difficult. I was always trying to find points to take the pressure off of him.
We had to climb a tree once on a wire in the ballet studio at the end of the movie. It’s a pretty rigorous fight scene and there were a couple of times where he goes to pick me up. The first time he pulled his groin so they put me on a wire and we had to go up to the balcony. Then James (played by Cam Gigandet) pulls him down and I smack the floor and roll to a mark. Hitting the mark was really difficult and there was glass all over the floor. It was fake glass but it can cut you. I enjoy stuff like that. I really like physicality. I really think it’s fun.







martes, 13 de enero de 2009

Rob Pattinson's No Model Boyfriend.


Ever since Twilight's Rob Pattinson was spotted at a Kings of Leon concert with Brazilian model Annelyse Schoenberger, rumors have been flying that the two are a couple.But J-14 spoke to Rob's Twilight costar Nikki Reed exclusively during her mall stop at New Jersey's Garden State Plaza's Hot Topic and she says not only have Rob and Annelyse never dated, but that's not even the right girl he was with at the show.

Two weeks ago, Rob and I went to a Kings of Leon concert with a girlfriend of mine named Sage, she says. Somebody photographed him and Sage together and it started this massive rumor that he's dating some supermodel named Annelyse, who's not even her. Us Weekly even printed it. My friend Sage is getting such a kick out of it, you have no idea.


Who is this mystery Sage?

She's been my friend since I was a little kid, Nikki says. She did do some modeling when she was younger, but she's a really great musician and actress now.


Now with Rob's supposed model girlfriend out of the picture, it leaves even more room for speculation that his friendship with 10,000 B.C. actress Camilla Belle could be coming in between Camilla and her new boyfriend Joe Jonas. For all the details, pick up the January issue of J-14, on sale December 8.





lunes, 12 de enero de 2009

Kristen Stewart: Bella in 'Twilight'.


This is your first big lead in a movie. How does that feel?


It feels good. I feel like I started somewhere huge, and there's sort of nowhere to go from here... I feel like it was a big responsibility and I was really intimidated for a while, but now that it's done and I've had some breathing time to step away from the project and I'm not living it anymore, I feel good. I'm really proud. I've never worked so hard on another movie and you wouldn't expect that.. It's a big studio movie, but...



Well, it was a pretty emotionally intense experience for you.


Yes, it was.



How long did it take to shake off the character of Bella?


I bought a truck, the truck that Charlie [Bella's dad] has in the movie, and I drove it home from Portland, and it was like driving away... Not that it was something I had to get away from. It was just, it was such a complete experience. I got over it. I drove all the way home. I mean, it was okay. [laughs] It didn't take that long. Just the drive home, I guess.


Edward, whom Bella falls for, is a vampire, but it seems like he could be the equivalent of the sensitive bad boy in real life, too.


Well, yes. There are a million guys like that, and most girls have the same feelings for them. Yeah, there are a bunch of little themes like that. I mean, yes, it's a fantasy, and we're at Comic-Con [so it's in the] comic book genre, but it's very close to home. It's about real human beings, even though the vampires aren't human. He is. That's what differentiates him between the good and the bad vampires, is that he still has a connection to his human self. He's not just given to the animalistic side.



What appeals to you about Bella?


Bella is a very honest... I mean, I could relate to her because she's just a very straight-up, good-natured girl who found herself in an insane position... [She's] seemingly logical, and then all of the sudden she's thinking of herself as a psychotic person and [she's] just swept away by something more powerful than her. Every girl wants to lose herself. And Bella started out hard and just lost it, and that's what I really loved about it.




domingo, 11 de enero de 2009

Rob Pattinson Talks 'Twilight'.


Just days before Twilight pandemonium is unleashed at a theater near you, Robert Pattinson, who plays the dreamy vampire Edward in the film adaptation of the Stephenie Meyer bestseller, still manages to work the mellow Brit vibe. We caught up with the actor during a quiet moment on the whirlwind promo jaunt for the movie, which hits theaters Nov. 21, to chat about his music, those adoring (if bold) Twilighters, and being one of Perez's boys.
I've been hearing about the fans just going crazy at the promo events for Twilight. You're bearing the brunt of it, huh?It's been fun. It's weird, I get to a city and I always get told there was a riot earlier on. By the time I get there, it's always quieted down a bit. But it is pretty nuts. I thought it might happen in one city, but it's happening everywhere, in every single city we go to, around the world. It's pretty crazy.



What's the weirdest thing that's happened so far?


Well, this was in New York, at the Apple store. This really, really young girl came up on stage, and she asked me to bite her, but like in such a passionate way — it wasn't really fun and games, "Hey, will you bite me, haha, joking!" She'd made up her mind, she got on the stage, and she wanted it. Like a real vampire bite.


So did you bite her?


Yeah, I did!


You did?


No, I didn't, really. Of course not. But it was really funny. It's just so strange how I go to these events and a lot of the people who are there are just completely convinced that I'm Edward. I'm really the character from the book, there is no Robert Pattinson. It's so funny. And they react in that way, not as if I'm just an actor.



Do you get stalked when you're just walking down the street on your own? Do people recognize you?


I don't even know. I mean, I haven't really done anything normal for ages now. God, it's been so long since I've even just walked down the street by myself. Actually, in New York, it didn't really happen. I went off on my own a bit. But it's really strange just being in airports and there are people there waiting for you to get off the plane with their cameras, and you're just exhausted. It's so weird. That's the biggest change I've noticed.



Have you seen the movie yet?


I haven't. I don't really watch my stuff at all, so I don't think I will end up seeing it. Well, maybe I will. I think I'll end up seeing it at the premiere, but I really don't like watching myself on screen.



Did you guys use a lot of CGI in the infamous sparkling Edward scene?


As usual, in Oregon, there were incredibly unpredictable, bizarre weather conditions. There was no sunlight that day, as usual, and of course, we needed this big ray of sunlight, so we used a huge light and I turned around into it. There was no make-up or anything on the day. We had tried to do it with make-up, but it just didn't work so we had to do it with special effects. It was done by George Lucas' company, Industrial Light & Magic, and apparently it looks pretty cool but I haven't seen it yet. But the people at the junket said it looks pretty amazing.



What's going on with New Moon?


I think the script's done already, they just need to greenlight it. But I think it all depends on how well Twilight does, whether it's shot or not.



I read somewhere that Catherine Hardwicke, the director, estimated it needs to earn $150 million.


Oh wow! I don't think it's that much! Is it? We've got our work cut out for us then. But I think there's a lot more CGI needed in the second one, so I think it is a significant amount of money. The second book was my favorite book, so I'm quite looking forward to working on it.



Have you read the whole series now?


I haven't. I've read all of the books except for Breaking Dawn. I didn't want to know how it ended. I wanted to have the uncertainty of not knowing where it's going to go, so I just read the first three. I want to read the last one, but I'm determined to wait.



What was it like working with Kristen Stewart?


She's basically the reason I did the movie. When I read the book, and there are these moony descriptions of Edward as this God-like figure, I thought there was no way I could play him, really. But when I got into the room with Kristen, there was just a certain chemistry. And she's just very smart. She's really the best actress of her generation. I'd seen the run of movies she'd done. She's 18, but it just seemed unnecessary for her to do any of that silly teen movie stuff. Even the movies that are supposed to be aimed at teens, she gets out of it not looking like she's in a teen movie. I thought she'd fight to make Twilight as serious as possible. She's a very cool person to work with.



And you guys tried to elevate the characters to another level, huh?


Yeah, it was really funny, looking back on it. When you just read the book, it's deceptively simple. It's an easy read. But when you try to actually play it, it's a lot more difficult. There's got to be a reason why there are so many fans. There's something else to it that people are really connecting with. So we were trying to find what that something else was.



So you were trying to play Edward as a manic depressive, then?


[Laughs] Initially, yes. Not quite a manic, maybe just a depressive. But Catherine talked us down from that a bit.



How does it feel to be one of Perez Hilton's boys? You're on that list alongside Zac Efron and the Jonas Brothers.


[Laughs] It's good. I didn't really know about that site until my mom sent me an email about it. I can't remember what specifically it was about, but she just forwarded something from him. It's just so strange how it all comes at you, literally overnight, all of this stuff. It's funny.



You've dethroned Zac Efron as the teen heartthrob du jour.


I don't think I quite have yet, though it's funny to see my face on T-shirts. I don't really see it as me. But luckily, I don't have that much to live up to because I'm playing a broody vampire. I don't have to be sweet and clean-cut. But it's cool, I guess. It's complimentary. I am grateful about being part of this huge phenomenon. I mean, there are only so many times something like this is going to happen in your life. And I thought I'd had my run with Harry Potter. It is quite insane.



Yeah, what do you do for a topper after doing Harry Potter and Twilight?


I don't know! What else is there? [Laughs] It's crazy, I've kind of cornered the young adult franchise market. But I'm doing this movie called Parts Per Billion in January, with Dennis Hopper and Rosario Dawson. It's a love story set against the end of the world, but none of the three couples it focuses on know it's the end of the world. It's a very poetic, philosophical script, so I think it should be fun. I'm paired up with Olivia Thirlby. She's cool.



I heard you've thrown your name out for the Jeff Buckley biopic that might happen?


I'd love to do it, but I don't think there's even a script out there yet. I don't look anything like him, so I don't know if I could play him. They'd probably go with James Franco — he looks just like him. But I just love his music. I love the idea of it. I don't know too much about his life, though.



Speaking of biopics, you're playing a young Salvador Dalí in Little Ashes. Are you into art?


It's not that much racier than Twilight, actually, despite the gay love aspect. I shot it before Twilight, and it's about Dalí's relationship with the writer Federico García Lorca, when they were in college together and up till about when Dalí was 26. It's about how their relationship affected their art and also how it formed Dalí into who he was in later life, that caricature. But I myself was never really very good at art. I haven't got a very good sense of perspective, in any element of my life, really. [Laughs] One of my best friends is a very, very good sculptor, and he's always annoyed with me because I don't know enough about art. I'm much more interested in film and music.



And you've got two songs featured in Twilight. So is music next?


I don't know. I used to play open mikes a lot before the stuff got leaked on the Web. But then everyone made such a big deal about it, it was a turn off. It just makes it a very different thing when people know who you are. It's like you go to an open mike, but the vibe has completely changed. It has to be an actual performance, whereas before it was just fun. It's just a lot more pressure, so it's different.



Is the audience completely different too now, when you do those? All teenage girls in Twilight T-shirts?


I haven't done one in a while actually, so I don't know. I used to just turn up at places and just do it, I'd never announce it. But then, I don't know how, word just got out so I stopped for a while. But I'm going back to London in December, so maybe I'll do some then.



Uh oh, I'm sure you've got fans booking flights to England now. Here's the last, infamous question. Team Jacob or Team Edward?


I can't really say I was either team, really. How do you decide? Oh, why not. I guess I'm Team Edward. That's the obvious answer. But I'll be Team Jacob in the third one.










viernes, 9 de enero de 2009

'Twilight' Sequel 'New Moon' Will Be Dark And 'Spectacular,' Stars And Director Say


And so, the lion fell in love with the lamb. But as $70.5 million worth of moviegoers watched the closing scenes of Twilight this past weekend, one thought unavoidably filled their love-struck minds: Where do Edward, Bella and all the other undead denizens of Forks go from here?
As Twilighters are all too happy to point out, author Stephenie Meyer has already penned three smash sequels to her intimate ode to human-immortal romance. The first, New Moon, got the green light for production this past weekend, less than 24 hours after Twilight began breaking box-office records. The best-selling sequel tells a decidedly darker story that has Bella receiving a nasty paper cut, getting attacked by one of her potential in-laws and becoming an adrenaline junkie while an in-hiding Edward teeters on the edge of suicide. (Read our New Moon wish list and add your own in the MTV Movies Blog.)
It's got werewolves, it's got visual effects that turn people into werewolves, it's got motorcycle stunts, you go to Italy. It's probably twice as much as this [to film], Twilight director Catherine Hardwicke explained when we asked her about the sequel just before Twilight opened.
Although the novel greatly reduces Edward's presence, Robert Pattinson insists that New Moon is the installment he loves best. I'm looking forward to doing the re-emergence ... at the end of the second book, when he's killing himself,
the star said when we spoke with him last week. I think that'd be kind of spectacular seeing that. And the second book is my favorite book, so I'm quite looking forward to doing it.
And as the final shot in Twilight promises, hell hath no fury like a woman who just lost her man. Luckily, the producers of the Twilight films were smart enough to sign Rachelle Lefevre, Edi Gathegi and their soon-to-be-far-more-important co-star Taylor Lautner for both New Moon and the potential third film Eclipse.
We're so ready to do it, Lefevre said, assuring us that Don Cheadle won't be replacing them any time soon. If we get a chance to do two and three, we'll be back for two and three.
Crossing his fingers, Edi Gathegi said he's looking forward to shooting Laurent's travels to Alaska and half-hearted attempts to become a vegetarian. I've got to clear my schedule no matter what's on the books, because it was just so much fun to work on this film.
The good news for fans is that studio Summit Entertainment recently took the official step of acquiring all of Meyer's Twilight books and has rehired screenwriter Melissa Rosenberg. Pattinson even told the Seattle Times that Rosenberg's New Moon script is already done.
But today, the actor most likely to be doing the dance of joy is the fast-rising, fan-kissing, underwear-signing Lautner. After establishing in the first film that he has a thing for Bella and the nerve to stare down Edward, he's already busy practicing his lines for Jacob Black's expanded role as a lover, fighter and werewolf in the next flicks.
The quote I love the most is Jacob's quote, 'Does my half being naked bother you?' That quote just cracks me up, he laughed when we met him for the first time, on the Twilight set. Because, you know, that's when he's shirtless, not wearing a top — we'll have to wait to see what he looks like.
Lautner plans to begin bulking up now that New Moon has received the official green light, and is also hoping to work some of his real-life martial-arts background into Jacob's upcoming battles. They found a YouTube video of me on ESPN when I was 11, and they were just freaking out and were watching it over and over again. ... I said that it'd be cool if Jacob did some of that in the fight scenes, he told us in August. [Hardwicke] said, 'Yeah, that would be cool.'
After this weekend, it appears that fiercely loyal "Twilight" fans may similarly have some cool scenes to look forward to in the not-so-far-away future.