Crossing the Blues
Showing posts with label France. Show all posts
Showing posts with label France. Show all posts


In an new interview with French magazine Le Figaro, Rob shares his thoughts on Bel Ami, Water for Elephants, and his fans.

Check out the rest of the scans & read the interview below.


“I’m Not James Dean”


At age 25, the world’s most famous vampire is moving away from the Twilight zone to reach for new horizons. In Water for Elephants he plays an elephant handler caught up in a tumultuous love story. An idol with less sharp teeth but wide ideas confides his thoughts to us in Hollywood.

It’s a rather moony soul who welcomes us in his suite at the Four Seasons in Los Angeles. A long spindly figure with a pale complexion and melancholy blue eyes, running his right hand through his tousled hair to tame it, Robert Pattinson seems caught up in some silent reverie that we pull him out of with our questions. Polite and British to the very tips of his artfully unlaced Dr. Martens, he comes back down to his life on earth.

A life chronicled in minute detail in the tabloids: a kiss given to Kristen Stewart on the set of Breaking Dawn in Rio de Janeiro, a birthday party at a friend's house, arriving at Vancouver Airport, getting a dog and setting Twitter buzzing... With his entire life chronicled in real time, you'd almost forget he’s an actor.

But at age 25, the vampire dandy is trying to stretch his wings. He’s getting ready to film Cosmopolis with David Cronenberg, an adaptation of Don DeLillo’s cult novel. And we’ll see him on the screen in May in Water for Elephants, starring with Reese Witherspoon and the unsettling Christoph Waltz (brought into the limelight by Quentin Tarantino in Inglourious Basterds), in the role of an animal handler who’s madly in love with a beautiful married woman. An encounter with an enigmatic icon, an old-school yet very “now” young man, a rebel and a conformist, a handsome aristocratic punk for budding* young girls. (*TN: word play on Proust’s novel)

Madame Figaro. - You shoot a lot. In addition to the last two films in the Twilight series, we'll see you in June in Bel Ami, from Declan Donnellan and Nick Ormerod, and soon in Water for Elephants, from Francis Lawrence. What attracted you to the role of Jacob Jankowski, a circus animal trainer?


Robert Pattinson: First, the book by young writer Sara Gruen, a tremendous success in the United States. The action takes place in the 1920s, in a traveling circus. With this role, suddenly I had the opportunity to leave behind the fantasized modern world of Twilight and live among animals, and touch concrete things.

You seem drawn to a romantic past...

- Yes, I love the history of America, it’s one of the things that really interests me. When I read the script, I was hooked immediately. It seemed obvious, and easy. Jacob is a tormented and mysterious soul. He lost his parents, he doesn’t want people digging around in his past. So if he joins this traveling circus, it’s to prove himself as a veterinarian. He doesn’t know he’s going to experience a violent and forbidden love there as well.

Your (acting) profile is taking shape: a lonely, misunderstood and very attractive man. All your characters have that in common.

- That's true. It’s as if Edward, the hero of Twilight, was the guiding thread running through all these roles. Jacob sees things in black and white. And Edward is always making distinctions between good and evil. My characters are Manichaean, in a way. That's why I try to give them inner depth.

So how did you work in Bel Ami? Georges Duroy, the novel’s hero, is older than you.


- It had me hesitating, then I just threw myself into it, because Maupassant is my favorite French writer. Bel Ami is a timeless classic. We had lots of fun with Uma Thurman, Kristin Scott Thomas and Christina Ricci, my screen partners. I focused my acting on the character’s great freedom of action. Bel Ami is an animal. He’s my first character who’s completely cynical yet ironically quite honest. But he’s destructive. He plays a game where no one respects the rules, where everyone has love affairs, where high society puts on a big fake show, where pretending is the most important thing. He doesn’t give a damn, he does whatever he pleases, and that’s exactly what appeals to women.

A bit like you, in short...

Oh no! I'm not a Don Juan at all. All these fans taking pictures of me, these blogs, this buzz... I don’t get it, but it’s actually pretty cool. Honestly, I have no sex appeal. All you have to do is walk around Los Angeles, London or Paris, and you’ll find tons of guys like me. I’m no James Dean.

But you’ve got a rebel side, a dark side. Who are your models, your favorite movie actors?

- From James Dean, who only made three movies, I like Giant with Elizabeth Taylor. But for me, the great icon of the sixties is Marlon Brando, with that inner rage, that duality of masculinity and hidden tenderness. I'm also a fan of gangster movies with James Cagney and Paul Newman, especially Cool Hand Luke. As for actresses, I love Isabelle Huppert and actresses from the golden age of Hollywood, like the smoldering Ava Gardner, and Katharine Hepburn, so classy and rough and funny. Kristen Stewart, whose acting I really admire, has bit of Hepburn in her.

Audrey or Katharine?

- No, Katharine. I'm not an Audrey fan. I know girls of my generation like her, but I find her a bit too girly.

What kind of women are you drawn to?

- I don’t dislike brainy girls. For a girl to attract me, she has to be pretty determined, has to have a good idea of what life’s about, and be a big reader. But I can’t say I prefer blondes, brunettes or redheads. I like emotional, elegant women - elegant in the sense she knows what suits her and what doesn’t. Designer clothes don’t guarantee you look good, just because they’re expensive. I think you have to just be yourself. That said, I love the Chanel look, even on really young girls!

What about you, are you a fashion victim?


- You see this gray jacket I’m wearing today? Well, I found it in an old suitcase at my house. I had it when I was 15. It’s an Agnes B., vintage 90’s, and it still fits. Otherwise, I'm a fan of Marc Jacobs, Proenza Schouler for girls and boys, and I buy lots of Dries Van Noten pants. Fashion is very important, including in movies. I’m thinking for instance of Jean Paul Gaultier’s work in The Fifth Element, which gave the film its signature look.

Do you wear any fragrance?

- My own, my body odour. (Laughter.)

What project are you really excited about right now?

- Well, one morning the phone rang and David Cronenberg was on the line. He offered me a role in his next film, Cosmopolis. It was almost as if Hitchcock had sought me out. Cronenberg is a great director. And the good news kept rolling in: Juliette Binoche will be starring alongside me, and also the very talented French director-actor Mathieu Amalric. And the icing on the cake: it’s an adaptation of a novel by Don DeLillo, one of my favorite authors. It’s a really hard role, a crazy day in the life of a millionaire whose life gets turned upside down in twenty-four hours. I'm gearing up to film it, it's really exciting.

How do you spend your days, when you’re feeling lazy?

- Well, the problem is, I don’t know what being lazy is anymore! I’m filming all the time. My life consists of working, that’s it. And besides, I don’t have a real home now. My home is a hotel. There are advantages, obviously: your room gets cleaned every day. But I'm starting to feel a bit rootless. I could even list the hotels I prefer around the world: in Rome, it’s the Bernini Bristol, a charming palazzo; in Paris, the Crillon. Whenever I have an hour of free time, I play my guitar, but mostly I read, I devour it.

Modern writers?
 
- A bit of everything. I started Underworld by Don DeLillo, and French novelist Michel Houellebecq is one of my favorites. In The Art of Struggle, he wrote this sentence that really resonates with me: "We've struggled through hardships and desires, without recapturing the taste of our childhood dreams." I feel close to Houellebecq’s heroes.


scans via source

Thanks to the lovely Le Monde de Francesca, we now know the alleged location and time for the Water for Elephants premiere in Paris, April 28th.. and it looks like the cast will be in attendance!


More on Fnac.com.


Dark Magazine (France) has a new interview with Rob, where he shares lots of cool details of working on the Water for Elephants set. Plus read on to find out who he was reportedly up against for the role of Jacob!

Translation and scans thanks to LeRPattzClub.



Robert Pattinson: “I feel better working with animals than with people"

When you are a young actor, handsome and you are so famous thanks to Twilight, you might be trapped forever in this outbreaking role. But Robert’s talent is linked to his ability to keep on working on sets and playing characters completely different from Edward Cullen. After the drama Remember Me, it’s in another love story we can see him with Academy Awards winners Reese Witherspoon (Walk the Line) and Christoph Waltz (Inglorious Basterds). For Dark Magazine, he talks about his unusual experience while playing Jacob, a young man who must drop his veterinary studies after a family tragedy, and he decides to change his way of life joining a circus. He will fall for a young woman, Marlena, and more surprisingly for an elephant: Rosie. This story is set in the 1930s in America.. In theaters on May 4th.

Hi Robert, can you talk about Jacob, Who is he? How will he join a circus?

Jacob is a veterinary student in Cornell University he’s about to take his final exam when his parents die in a car accident. His whole world collapses in a few months. He jumps on board an old train to start from scratch and try to find a job somewhere, then he discovers it’s a circus train. He sees Marlena the very first day and these are the 2 main reasons he wants to stay and be part of this circus life. He gradually manages to accept his new life and falls for Marlena. And he also manages to blow everything out ! (laughs).

How would you describe him?

Jacob doesn’t know anything about the circus. At the beginning, he is self conscious, he knows how idealistic he is. But he soon realizes this universe, that he discovers in the middle of a huge economical crisis, seems to destroy the slighest spark of hope within himself. He also gets acquainted with August, a very violent man. Actually, Jacob goes through several trials of life, he faces a lot of difficulties throughout the story, and in the end, he realizes that he kept his idealistism, no matter what. I think this is what moves Marlena and encourages her to follow him. August is such a practical man . He thinks he must appear as a cold and harsh man to the others otherwise his world will collapse. But Jacob sees things quite differently. His way of life is so far from August’s.

Did you easily manage to connect to your character ?

Yes. Honestly , I feel better working with animals than with people. I found out that all the animals had a weakness. You just need some peppermint to be loved by elephants. I realized you can do whatever you want with giraffes whenever you have apple juice on your hands. Even the animal trainers were astonished . There was a 6 month-old girafe on set and they couldn’t make her do what they want . I came to see her covered with apple juice and she followed me anywhere. Everybody was like “How did you do it ? Why does she do as you say ?”.


Did you read Sara Gruen’s novel, “Water for Elephants?"

I hadn’t read it before I got the role, but once I started, I couldn’t stop. I read it on the plane while I was going for some reshoots for Twilight and the man next to me that day was also reading it. On my flight back, my neighbour was also reading it! It was really weird. I know the book was a best seller in the USA but I think it’s also a successful book in foreign countries. I feel it’s like the Twilight books. When we started shooting the first film, more and more people discovered this book, sales started to boost and the novel immediately became popular. A few people had heard of “Water for Elephants” before and suddenly, by word of mouth, everybody had read the book.

This part is so different from the one you have in Twilight. Was it an interesting and exciting experience?

It was awesome. It was great to work with such great actors. I didn’t really know what to expect when I signed for the film. Then, I met Tai the elephant and it was so incredible that I absolutely wanted to do it! (laughs). From the very first day, it was an amazing experience. Everybody seemed to be deeply involved in that project, everybody on set was convinced that this film was gonna be extraordinary.

So how was it working with Tai, did you fall in love?

Almost! (laughs). I was so sad when I had to leave her at the end of the shooting. She had such an extraordinary charisma. It’s weird – It must be the same with any other elephants since they are so huge. You feel untroubled when you are next to them . I would easily sit all day long next to Tai. And it’s what I did the very first days. I always sat next to her and I stayed there all day long. There’s no way she tramples on you or hurts you because she always knows exactly where you are. Those animals have amazing personalities – at least, she has. She’s lovely.
Set secretsIf the novel wasn’t well known in France, the Hollywood top actors of the new generation fought for Jacob’s part : Channing Tatum (GI Joe, Cher John), Emile Hirsch (Into the Wild) and Andrew Garfield (The social network, Spiderman) auditioned but it was Robert Pattinson who was cast . Resse Witherspoon and Robert had already played together in Vanity Fair. In Water for Elephants they are secret lovers and in Vanity Far, Reese was Robert’s mother !




Series Fan magazine interviewed Rob in LA a few weeks ago, and they have now posted their story. In it, Rob shares details about working with Reese and more from the Water for Elephants set. Read it over at Thinking of Rob who did the translation.

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