Showing posts with label the lost city of z. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the lost city of z. Show all posts

Good Time and The Lost City of Z mentioned in loads of Best Of 2017 lists!

Good Time and The Lost City of Z mentioned in loads of Best Of 2017 lists!

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Yes, we're feeling it! Rob's 2017 was the best of his career! We already know he brought in key Best Actor nominations for the Gotham Awards and the Spirit Awards but Good Time has made countless "Best of" lists that we wanted to share with you.

Also, a pleasant turn of events - folks didn't forget The Lost City of Z! So that other great film Rob supported earlier in the year has its own set of accolades. We'll keep updating the list and if you notice one we've missed, let us know in the comments and we'll add it. This being the best and extensive set of praise since Cosmopolis, we want to memorialize this year in film for Rob!

GOOD TIME
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#1 - Best Films of 2017 - Film Comment
#1 - Best Films of 2017 - The Ringer
#2 - Best Movies of 2017 - Fox San Diego
#3 - Best Movies of 2017 - The New Yorker
#3 - Favorite Films of 2017 - Birth.Movies.Death
#4 - 10 Best Films of 2017 - BBC Culture, "Pattinson’s career-best performance
#4 - 10 Best Movies of 2017 - National Review
#6 - 10 Best Films of 2017 - Interview, "Robert Pattinson, in his finest performance yet"
#7 -Top 10 Films of 2017 - Cahiers du Cinema
#7 - Best Films of 2017 - Sight & Sound
#8 - Best Films of 2017 - The Playlist, "Robert Pattinson does his absolute best work to date..."
#10, Honorable Mention - Best Movies of 2017 - THR critics
#10 - Best Films of 2017 - Dazed
#14 - Best Movies of 2017 - Esquire, "Arguably the finest male performance of the year comes courtesy of Robert Pattinson..."
#14 - Best Movie Moments of 2017 - Indiewire, "Brought to life by the best and most committed performance of Robert Pattinson’s increasingly dynamic career..."
#17 - 20 Best Films of 2017 - AV Club
No Rank - Best of 2017 - Vulture, "Robert Pattinson gives a career-best performance..."

More accolades beyond Best Film

#2 - Best Performances of 2017 - The Playlist, "We can’t talk about Pattinson in 2017 without also mentioning his compelling and gentle supporting role in James Gray‘s grave and beautiful “The Lost City of Z.” But it’s his borderline unrecognizable turn in the Safdies’ “Good Time” that is the career-remaking revelation. Connie’s trippy, one-crazy-night, botched-heist shenanigans could merely be manic (and the film’s energy never flags), but Pattinson, beneath an astringently bottle-blonde mop of hair, (especially opposite an equally excellent Benny Safdie as his mentally challenged brother), brings the very thing his fame-making role as a vampire in the “Twilight” series definitely didn’t have: soul. R-Patz is dead; long live Robert Pattinson."
25 Reasons to Love the Movies in 2017 - Robert Pattinson - Rolling Stone, "it's the best thing the star has ever done
#3 - Best Actor - Dublin Film Critics Circle
#3 - Best Scores & Soundtracks - The Playlist
#3 - Best Uses of Music in Movies - Variety
#5 - Best Film Soundtracks of 2017 - Little White Lies
#6 - Best Cinematography - The Playlist
#10 - Best Film Posters of 2017 - Little White Lies
#16 - Best Movie Trailers of 2017 - The Playlist
#16 - Best Movie Posters of 2017 - The Playlist
40 Best Movie Posters of 2017 - Indiewire
Best Cinematography of 2017 - The Film Stage
Honorable Mention - The Huffington Post
Honorable Mention - The LA Times
Favorites - The New York Times

THE LOST CITY OF Z
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#4 - Best Films of 2017 - The Ringer
#5 - Best Movies of 2017 - The Thrillist
#6 - The Best Films of 2017 - Village Voice
#9 - 20 Best Films of 2017 - AV Club
#9 - Best Films of 2017 - Film Comment
#9 - Best Movies of 2017 - Esquire
#10 - Best Films of 2017 - The Playlist, "...Robert Pattinson, who has had the best year of his career."
#31 - Best Movies of 2017 - The New Yorker

More accolades beyond Best Film

#1 - Best Cinematography - The Playlist
Best Cinematography of 2017 - The Film Stage
Honorable Mention - The Huffington Post
Honorable Mention - Best Movies of 2017 - THR critics
Honorable Mention - The LA Times
Honorable Mention - The Playlist


Video Mashups that include Good Time and/or The Lost City of Z!





NEW/OLD: Great black and white behind-the-scenes picture of Robert Pattinson from The Lost City of Z

NEW/OLD: Great black and white behind-the-scenes picture of Robert Pattinson from The Lost City of Z

Love this shot!


Source | Thanks Cosmo!

AWARD SEASON: Robert Pattinson joins Charlie Hunnam, Sienna Miller, James Gray and Brad Pitt for The Lost City of Z PGA screening

AWARD SEASON: Robert Pattinson joins Charlie Hunnam, Sienna Miller, James Gray and Brad Pitt for The Lost City of Z PGA screening

Well this was a pleasant surprise! The Lost City of Z hasn't had the same success as Good Time this award season but Amazon Studios still put the film out to voters for consideration and last night, they screened the film for the Producers Guild.

We'll see if the screening  and Q&A gives the film a boost but for now, we'll enjoy the social media posts!









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VIDEOS UNDER THE CUT!

Robert Pattinson talks to Indiewire about Claire Denis, his upcoming feminist western comedy, working with Mark Rylance and MORE!

Robert Pattinson talks to Indiewire about Claire Denis, his upcoming feminist western comedy, working with Mark Rylance and MORE!

Great interview with Rob about his career and the directors he chooses!

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From Indiewire, "Robert Pattinson on Picking Under-the-Radar Directors and Why Claire Denis is the Most ‘Authentic Punk’ He’s Ever Met":

It’s not unusual for actors after they’ve become movie stars to use their clout to make their passion projects or work with directors they admire. What makes Robert Pattinson’s post-“Twilight” career choices so fascinating is he hasn’t reached for A-List directors, studio projects with an awards pedigree, or personal pet projects he’s determined to shepherd. Instead, he’s sought out celebrated directors whose work is slightly below-the-radar and outside the mainstream of American cinema.

“I really like the hunt,” said Pattinson in an interview with IndieWire when he was at the Savannah Film Festival receiving a Maverick Award. “I like finding directors who haven’t been fully realized by the wider world yet.”

In the case of the Josh and Benny Safdie, who directed Pattinson in “Good Time,” Pattinson saw an image from their previous film on IndieWire that caught his attention. “As soon as I saw the trailer for ‘Heaven Knows What,’ I knew what they were like,” said Pattinson. “I was actively looking for directors who just had a very wild, out-of-control feeling. I realize quite quickly the type of [directors] I want to work with.”

Pattinson said he puts a great deal of time into tracking smaller and international films—mainly by reading reviews coming out of festivals.

“It’s so difficult to keep up with everything that is coming out – half the movies I like aren’t even released in this country,” said Pattinson. “That’s the one good thing about being with a big agency [WME], you’re constantly asking them to somehow track down a streaming link. The annoying thing is a majority of films I end up watching on my phone.”

Pattinson said there is no “wish list” of directors, but he reaches out to the ones that interest him when he comes across their work. In the case of the Safdies, there wasn’t a natural role for Pattinson in their upcoming “Uncut Gems,” so the brothers wrote “Good Time” for the actor based on aspects of the actor’s personality that they saw while spending time with him in private, mainly characteristics that they hadn’t been seen from him in public or on the big screen.

“I definitely have a kind of mania sometimes, that not a lot of people see,” said Pattinson. “It happens when I get inspired by something that I think that [the Safdies] wanted to use as part of the character. That’s why I wanted to work with them as well. I’d done a lot of movies where they’re quite reactive parts and mainly quite still. There was a comfort there for me and I really wanted to break out of that pattern.”

In the case of “Lost City of Z,” Pattinson said he had been desperate to work with director James Gray – inspired by the filmmaker’s early collaborations with Joaquin Phoenix (“The Yards,” “We Own the Night,” “Two Lovers”) – on a number of different projects. After seven years of possible collaborations, he was willing to do any role Gray had for him. In the case of “Lost City of Z,” it meant shooting in 100-degree jungle heat in a quiet, supporting role in which Pattinson disappears behind a beard and into the story’s backdrop as the film progresses. That idea of hiding or escaping into an unrecognizable role, as he did more prominentaly in “Good Time,” appeals to Pattinson above all else.

“I don’t like bombastic performances,” he said, then laughed. “I just sort of like convincing people that I’m not what people thought I was initially…It’s psychologically healthy for me as well. Otherwise, if I’m too trapped in myself, then I get really depressed.”

MORE UNDER THE CUT

BUY NOW: Robert Pattinson's The Lost City of Z available on Blu-ray/DVD in the US!

BUY NOW: Robert Pattinson's The Lost City of Z available on Blu-ray/DVD in the US!

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Did you miss Rob on the big screen for The Lost City of Z? I certainly hope not but that's not an issue now. It's been awhile since a Rob film on Blu-ray has been offered in the US so snatch up your own personal copy of TLCoZ on Blu-ray/DVD today!

Robert Pattinson's The Lost City of Z will be released for home viewing on July 11th

Robert Pattinson's The Lost City of Z will be released for home viewing on July 11th

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Are you having a hard time seeing The Lost City of Z in theaters? Well you won't have to wait long to own the movie and view it in the pleasure of your own home!
Go ahead and pre-order so that it's on your doorstep July 11th!

NEW PIC: Robert Pattinson with James Gray behind the scenes of The Lost City of Z

NEW PIC: Robert Pattinson with James Gray behind the scenes of The Lost City of Z

The Lost City of Z twitter account shared a new behind-the-scenes image of Rob with director, James Gray. Make sure you catch this film in theaters near you before it's gone! It's an epic and should definitely be seen on the big screen. It's already made over $6M, a second best showing for Gray and a welcome tally for Rob during his post-Twi years of auteur films. Get out and support!
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Robert Pattinson Bearded & Beautiful In A BTS Pic From 'The Lost City Of Z' Set In Belfast

Robert Pattinson Bearded & Beautiful In A BTS Pic From 'The Lost City Of Z' Set In Belfast

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Thanks Susie

Robert Pattinson talks one-on-one with Collider in an extensive and excellent interview about his career and many more treats

Robert Pattinson talks one-on-one with Collider in an extensive and excellent interview about his career and many more treats

What an exceptional interview of great length! Can't they all be like this? There's such a respect for Rob's work and his intelligence. It's not a gossipy bit and we know it wouldn't have been based on the interviewer and interviewee. We also don't just dive into the same TLCoZ info we're familiar with at this point. We get to read more about Rob's attachment to Good Time than before, his joy with working on High Life with Claire Denis (shooting in August if the money holds together), and a tease about a new film he might be taking on. This interview is rich in professional flavor and more!

I've posted the start but please continue over to Collider to read the rest. You definitely will want to. It's the stuff Robsessed dreams are made of.


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COLLIDER: You won’t remember this, but I actually interviewed you in New York for Remember Me, back in 2010. So, you’ve landed on your feet.

ROBERT PATTINSON: God. So long ago now and it was 2010.

Yeah. Long time ago.

PATTINSON: Doesn’t feel like a very long time ago.

Time goes by very fast. There’s something I want to talk to you about: I’m a legit fan of your acting. One of the things that I am impressed by is the movies you’ve done. You’re going for cool roles with good directors and you’re going after scripts. For example, I really enjoyed your work in The Rover. And I think that one of the things is a lot of actors have to work because of, you know, they have to pay the mortgage. And I think that one of the benefits you have is you gained that financial freedom after a certain franchise to be able to pick the projects you want to do. Can you sort of talk about what you’ve tried to do over the few years as an actor and the roles you’ve been gravitating towards?

PATTINSON: Yeah, that’s completely right. I mean, I have been incredibly fortunate to be able to do that. But I also think if you get sort of early success there’s always this part of you which feels like, “I need to address the imbalance, I need to kind of earn that success after the fact” [laughs]. And so I try to find roles that are hard and also, I still find now, even after I’ve done loads of really random movies, directors are really surprised that I want to play the parts that I want to play. They just assume that you want to only do the honorable good guy lead who saves the day or dies at the end [laughs]. It’s like, I don’t know, I just kind of don’t think any audience would want to see me do that, or I always think that you have to have a certain understanding of what an audience would want to see from you as a public person as well as a character. So yeah, I generally try and find ways to get my characters severely punished [laughs].

The other thing though is a lot of people I’ve spoken to talk about getting pigeonholed in a certain type of role and the only way you can sort of break that is to show people that you don’t want to do just this one role again and again and again.

PATTINSON: Yeah, and it’s amazing as well how people if you want to get a different role, the majority of time the producers or directors want to see you play a similar role already, whereas the only thing I really want to do is swing wildly from one end to the other [laughs]. But then I think after it’s just starting to kind settle into the kind of area that I want to be in. I knew it would take a long time, but like this year working with Claire Denis and I’m probably going to work—I don’t know if I can say it yet [laughs].

Yeah, don’t. I don’t want to get you in trouble. But by all means, say it.

PATTINSON: I think I’m going to do something with Antonio Campos as well. Do you know Antonio Campos is?

I do.

PATTINSON: The part with him is like –I mean, he actually wanted me to do a different part and I was like, “No this is the part.” It’s this absolutely degenerate [laughs]. But then I did this thing with the Safdie Brothers. I don’t know if you know the Safdies?

I’m not as familiar.

PATTINSON: They did that film called Heaven Knows What about west side junkies.

I definitely didn’t see it, and I don’t think I want to pretend that I did.

PATTINSON: It’s incredible. I have this movie coming out this year with them, which is really like, I don’t know why they trust me on it but it’s playing –It’s like so specifically Queens-related, and I’m obviously not at all acquainted [laughs].

You’re not from New York? I’m surprised to learn this!

PATTINSON: And everyone’s non-actors in it, and we’re pretty much…

Well, American Honey did a great job without traditional actors.

PATTINSON: Yeah, I think it’s the same, man. Elaine or Jen, who cast that? God, my memory is so shit. Yeah, I think it’s the same casting people who did American Honey. But a lot of the people from American Honey came from the Safdie Brothers’ first movie Heaven Knows What.

Oh, there you go.

PATTINSON: Yeah. But she is an amazing street-casting person, she is incredible. And some of the people in—There’s this movie called Good Time, and it’s crazy. I literally can’t wait for it to come out.

That’s what Megan was saying.

PATTINSON: Oh really?

She was saying, “You need to see this movie,” and I’m like, “Okay!”

PATTINSON: It’s just really fun. I mean, it’s kind of like, it’s so scrappy and stuff but you know, I watch so many movies and I find a lot of them very predictable, and also, a little bit playing it safe.

That’s why you should go see The Handmaiden.

PATTINSON: I love The Handmaiden. It’s fucking amazing.

If you want to talk about movies that take twists and turns. I was sitting in the theater, jaw on ground, six times.

PATTINSON: No! I literally thought it was absolutely incredible. And also, I didn’t really know what it was about, and I remember watching in this theater in New York and there’s so many dirty, creepy old men sitting around [laughs] and I was watching like “What? This movie is crazy sexy! I had no idea at all!”

But you mentioned, that’s the type of movie you will not get made in America anymore. Maybe, I don’t even know if it could have ever been made in America.

PATTINSON: It’s that main period where it could have been, but like…

Maybe the early 70s?

PATTINSON: Or 80s. There’s a bunch of…

Oh, that’s true!

PATTINSON: Yeah, yeah. But yeah, I just find it so – I mean, I love going to a theater and just being like, “Wow!” That and I mean, Embrace of the Serpent. Did you ever see that?

I have not, but I’ve heard of it.

PATTINSON: Unbelievable. But yeah, I don’t understand. But this thing I did with the Safdies, it’s kind of very sort of subversive, but at the same time it’s a real genre film. So I think people will see it and kind of be quiet, it seems it’s weirdly accessible for a very strange movie. So, I hope people will like it.

Well, jumping into why I get to talk to you, the actual movie, The Lost City of Z.

PATTINSON: Yeah, sorry!



He's the best. I can hear him saying sorry with that big smile of his. Maybe a laugh too. Now I want audio! LOL

Click HERE to continue reading this awesome interview. They get into TLCoZ, of course, but also cover the choice to have a beard, Rob's long love of M&Ms makes an appearance, Good Time 411 pops up again, the merits of film vs digital, memorable TLCoZ filming experience, preparing for High Life, the superhero genre, Guardians of the Galaxy....do you get the point? This interview! Perfection.

Source: Collider

Here it is...your moment of Robert Pattinson

Here it is...your moment of Robert Pattinson

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UHQ: New and Old stills of Robert Pattinson ready for exploration in The Lost City of Z

UHQ: New and Old stills of Robert Pattinson ready for exploration in The Lost City of Z

These are GREAT. I get lost in the UHQ. It's a tad creepy zooming in on Rob like this but why make UHQ images if we aren't supposed to zoom in and explore ones pores and irises? What?
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Click and save for UHQ! 
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MORE under the cut!

Robert Pattinson talks to Yahoo about subverting people's expectations, his obsessive Amazon habit and more!

Robert Pattinson talks to Yahoo about subverting people's expectations, his obsessive Amazon habit and more! 

This is a great interview from Yahoo! And so Rob. You're gonna love it. It's fairly wide ranging too! He touches on 5 of his films past, present and future. Enjoy!

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How familiar were you with the source material for Lost City of Z? Had you read David Grann’s book?
Yeah, James gave me the book when it was a totally different script. Or I may have read it long before there was even a script at all. I think at the time he was thinking about me to play Percy’s son. Because I must’ve only been about 21. And then I just kind of stayed with it as time went on, and it went through all these different casts. [Laughs]

It sounds like the script changed a lot through the years. What were the biggest changes made over time? 
When I first read it, it was a straight action movie, like Indiana Jones. It was this rip-roaring adventure movie, and not this kind of epic, elegant saga that takes place over 30 years.

Costin is a much more minor character in the book. What did you build off of to shape him?
Well, I always thought with Percy’s character it would be a good idea to have a foil. I always interpreted Percy’s character as this man determined to fix the reputation that he thinks he’s deserved, and which his father has ruined for him. … He keeps going back to the jungle again and again and again, just to fix this insecurity. So I liked the idea of Costin being this character who basically had a total disregard for the English aristocracy or any kind of social climbing whatsoever. So he didn’t really want to bring anything back from the jungle, anyway. The entire point for him was just to go because he had nothing to live for in England.

How much information was out there about the real guy? Any sense of his military career?
Well, Costin in reality was a refrigerator salesman. There was an advert in the Times of London saying, “Adventurers Wanted.” That’s actually how he got the job. [Laughs] He was one of the only people who applied for it. But he was in the army — he was a physical fitness instructor. But really, I liked the craziness of just applying to be an adventurer.

You rock some pretty rad facial hair in this movie. Did that look grow on you — pun intended — or did you not care for it?
By the end, I was definitely over it. But at least when you’re shooting a movie with your face covered, there’s very little makeup to be done. It was definitely a “Get out of bed and that’s it” situation. That helped in the middle of the jungle.

You’ve played lead roles, you’ve taken supporting parts — this is more of a supporting role in an ensemble. Do you have a preference these days?
There are certain directors I just really want to work with, and you bring what you can to a part. But in some ways it’s kind of nice [to play a supporting role]. It is a little bit liberating because you don’t have to concentrate on the narrative thrust of the story. You’re just purely thinking about character and just embellishing it a little bit. But with this, I would’ve played any part in it, pretty much.

Costin has some great lines in this movie. I think one of my favorites is when you say to Hunnam, “We’re too British for this jungle.” Did you guys feel out of your element filming in the jungles of Colombia?
No, I really loved it. I guess in some ways, it was kind of hard. But it’s just incredible, going to work every day in a little boat, going up river in the middle of virgin jungle in Colombia. It was very, very close to being on vacation, to be honest. [Laughs]

But the type of vacation where you couldn’t eat anything?
Well, yeah. There’s a certain degree of harshness, and we were trying to lose as much as weight as possible in a really short period of time. So I guess there’s that element to it. But there’s a reason those guys wanted to keep going back as well. It’s amazing.

Do you consider yourself pretty adventurous? Could your relate to that thirst for exploration?
Yeah, definitely. I do sometimes find myself gravitating toward a job just because it’s shooting out in the middle of nowhere. If I’m shooting in a city, generally it can become a repetitive scenario. If you have anyone taking pictures on their phones, it just constantly reminds you of the reality of your life. And I find it becomes a little more difficult. Whereas if you’re out in the jungle and everyone is on the same page as you, you just sort of believe in character a little bit more.

What is your own personal Amazonian adventure? What is the biggest risk you’ve taken in your career so far?
I don’t know: I’ve done things which I thought were going to be really risky, which ended up not being risky at all. I generally try to keep finding ways to push the envelope as much as I can, and whenever I get the opportunity to do it, I generally try to take it. But I don’t really worry about taking risks, to be honest.

What’s something you thought was risky that ended up not being so?
I did this movie years ago called Bel Ami, which was at the height of all the Twilight stuff. It was this Guy de Maupassant novel about a guy who seduces women specifically to screw them out of their money and ruin their lives. I thought that was a relatively subversive choice to make at the time. [Laughs] And no one really seemed to think the same thing.

What is your relationship with your Twilight fan base these days? Has the madness that surrounded your life calmed down at all?
It’s definitely calmed down in terms of my everyday life, but mainly because I spend more time in London, which is totally different. And I’m doing more parts that just sort of interest me, while in a lot of ways taking a little bit of a step back just to learn and get better. I guess I’ve never really acknowledged what the fan base is, or even if I have one. [Laughs]

Oh, you have one.
But, yeah, I’m always pretty curious about what people say afterward, and who turns up, who likes the movie. It’s always kind of random. But I love it when someone who you just really wouldn’t expect says, “Oh, I liked you in this.”

What films have been most unexpected?
It’s always just really strange. I’ve done a bunch of movies which I thought might’ve been impossible to be seen. There was this film Little Ashes, where I played Salvador Dalí, from years and years ago, and just the other day I was walking down the street and somebody came up and said, “Oh, that’s my favorite film!” You kind of forget that people even watch your films. [Laughs]

What do you think of all the universe building that is going on in Hollywood right now and the possibility that they could reboot Twilight and expand its world? Could you ever see yourself playing Edward Cullen again?
Really, they’re expanding it? So I’ll get my own spin-off? [Laughs]

Potentially! It could be called Edward: Homecoming.
Yeah, exactly.

But would you ever dip back in if the opportunity presented itself?
I mean, I’m always kind of curious. Anything where there’s a mass audience — or seemingly an audience for it — I always like the idea of subverting people’s expectations. So there could be some radical way of doing it, which could be quite fun. It’s always difficult when there’s no source material. But, yeah, I’m always curious.

What type of role haven’t you been offered yet that you’re eager for?
I sort of, to a fault, rely a little bit too much on being inspired by things that land on my doorstep. I literally just did this movie called Good Time, which I think is a really interesting role. But I would’ve never, ever predicted that I would’ve liked it. [Pattinson plays a New York bank robber running from the police.] I think that he’s basically the embodiment of an angry commenter on the Internet.

That sounds great.
Well, if you watch the movie you’ll probably be like, “Huh? What are you talking about?” But one of my favorite things to do — this is quite embarrassing — but you know how when you look on Amazon and you see a product that’s got a consumer review that is so scathing, on like an electric toothbrush or something? Like, literally buying this toothbrush has ruined this person’s life. I always click on that person’s buying history, or their other reviews, and I’ll just read them for days and days. And I’m really amused. These people just have to vent this kind of furious anger on product reviews. I’ve always found that sort of character really interesting. [Laughs]

Source: Yahoo

VIDEO: Robert Pattinson and the gang talk about The Lost City of Z in iTunes featurette

VIDEO: Robert Pattinson and the gang talk about The Lost City of Z in iTunes featurette

This is a great featurette! Rob is a delight of course. He pops up twice to talk about the film and he's dispersed throughout in behind the scenes and film shots.


Click HERE to view the HD video via Apple. 

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Source | Video: Via

Great behind-the-scenes pictures of Robert Pattinson from The Lost City of Z looking very adventurous jungleman

Great behind-the-scenes pictures of Robert Pattinson from The Lost City of Z looking very adventurous jungleman 

Here are the cropped versions of just Rob, naturally. You can see the larger, full-sized pictures in the thumbnails.

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Click for full-sized pics!
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Source

Here it is...your moment of Robert Pattinson

Here it is...your moment of Robert Pattinson

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NEW: MORE HQ Photos Of Robert Pattinson At 'The Lost City Of Z' LA Premiere & Leaving The Afterparty

NEW: MORE HQ Photos Of Robert Pattinson At 'The Lost City Of Z' LA Premiere & Leaving The Afterparty

Seriously, how friggin' adorable is he?

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Holy JawPorn!


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Looooooooooooong Legs

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Click for HQ
Premiere

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Leaving The Afterparty

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Thanks Posh via Pattinson AW
 
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