Hey Everyone,
This is a very interesting interview of Robert...Read it carefully...
Enjoy!
Cleopatra
By Larry Carroll, with reporting by Jeff Cornell
''New Moon' star talks onscreen and off-screen romances with MTV Radio.
BEVERLY HILLS, California — As you read this, "New Moon" has the biggest opening weekend of 2009,
will certainly rake in millions more this weekend and could possibly go
on to become the highest-grossing film of the year. In short, it's a
very good time to be Robert Pattinson.
Recently, the man otherwise known as Edward Cullen sat down with
MTV Radio for a frank chat about life in both Hollywood and Forks,
Washington. If you can spare 10 minutes between trips to the theater
for repeat viewings, read on to learn RPattz's thoughts about his
director, the hardest "New Moon" scenes to shoot, and the most romantic
thing he's ever done.
MTV: Tell us about working with Chris Weitz. What were your thoughts when you first received his now-famous "orientation guide"?
Robert Pattinson: When he gave that out, it was such [a
surprise]; I mean, I'd never had that from any director. It was 40, 50
pages long, this thing. And this is in addition to a bunch of letters
and e-mails and everything [he had sent the cast], trying to show that
he's on the same page as us and he's completely with us in making the
film. And he didn't falter from that attitude throughout the whole
movie. It probably sounds ridiculous how much praise this guy gets. I
was just with his wife and him in Japan, and she was even sick of it!
But he is like a saint. He's one of the best people I've ever met, let
alone directors. I think in a lot of ways that shows in the movie —
it's got a lot of heart.
MTV: Since you're only in parts of the film, did you
feel disjointed from your castmates? Did you wish Edward was in "New
Moon" more?
Pattinson: Those [hallucination] scenes were the hardest
scenes. They weren't really at the time, but when I saw the first cut
of the movie, I was like, [we need to re-do this]; we've changed them
quite a bit in the edit and ADR, mainly because it's so difficult. It's
not Edward who you're playing, it's a manifestation of Bella's
loneliness and desperation. That was always very difficult — I was
trying to ask Kristen, "How would you play it?" As for being alone, I
think I've always felt a little bit aloof as the character throughout
the whole series. I think that's how he is.You can read the Whole Article HERE



No comments:
Post a Comment