Showing posts with label the wrap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the wrap. Show all posts

VIDEO: Super cute and funny interview with Robert Pattinson and Claire Denis about casting High Life

VIDEO: Super cute and funny interview with Robert Pattinson and Claire Denis about casting High Life

This is amazing. It's even better since we know the baby!


Source: The Wrap

NEW: Robert Pattinson portraits for Variety, Deadline and The Wrap with Claire Denis and Mia Goth at TIFF

NEW: Robert Pattinson portraits for Variety, Deadline and The Wrap with Claire Denis and Mia Goth at TIFF

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Variety | The Wrap

Another great shot of Robert Pattinson for The Wrap at Sundance Film Festival + HQ versions of more stunning photos

Another great shot of Robert Pattinson for The Wrap at Sundance Film Festival + HQ versions of more stunning photos

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Click HERE if you missed the first photo but it's also below.

HQs of SundanceRob!
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This was Rob's shot with Vanity Fair
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Source

Gorgeous studio portraits of Robert Pattinson for The Wrap and The Hollywood Reporter at the Sundance Film Festival

Gorgeous studio portraits of Robert Pattinson for The Wrap and The Hollywood Reporter at the Sundance Film Festival

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And this one with Mia for THR

A post shared by Hollywood Reporter (@hollywoodreporter) on


Click for HQ

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Source: The Wrap | Source: THR

Robert Pattinson, David Michod and Guy Pearce in a couple of videos from the LA Press Junket


The best thing about these videos is knowing there are so many more to come.. Press Junkets, giving us PromoRob love for weeks.

HitFix Interview.
Rob, Guy and David discuss making the film, concepts of bullying and the hope within the film.



The Wrap.
Discussing Rob's accent, character Eric's anger problem, and that 'Pretty Girl Rock' moment - which for those of us who haven't seen the movie yet, I think it's the most anticipated scene. At least it is for me..



Thanks to Cersei

Robert Pattinson is a winner at the Cannes Film Festival! Color us not surprised.

Robert Pattinson is a winner at the Cannes Film Festival! Color us not surprised.

I liked this write up from The Wrap. It's about the winners and losers at Cannes so far and guess who's a winner??

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Excerpt from The Wrap's 10 Cannes Winners and Losers (So Far): Robert Pattinson Scores as Ryan Gosling Bores
The Cannes Film Festival is still going full-force but it's never too early to anoint this year's winners and losers. After reading reams of coverage from across the globe, the verdicts are in from TheWrap‘s one-man jury. Let's see who will be leaving France with a frown and who will be returning Stateside with a smile.
...
Robert Pattinson - While neither David Michod's “The Rover” nor David Cronenberg's “Maps to the Stars” drew stellar reviews (Tink: Um. Beg to differ HERE and HERE), Pattinson was singled out for his performances, particularly for his work alongside Guy Pearce in “The Rover.” None of Pattinson's post-”Twilight” movies have found great success or acclaim, but judging from his reviews for these two films, he's not going anywhere and will have a feature career for years to come — especially if he continues working with directors who push him as a performer.

Robert Pattinson aka King of Cannes, has a weird and meaty role in The Rover and knows what to do with it

Robert Pattinson aka King of Cannes, has a weird and meaty role in The Rover and knows what to do with it

While Rob's Maps To The Stars premiere was underway, the fandom got a certain something to trend worldwide...

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ROBERT PATTINSON KING OF CANNES!!!! *pops open the bubbly*

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Yes I made us a new KoC graphic to celebrate and accompany this awesome write up from The Wrap - who arguably believes Rob is the King of Cannes too, they just say it differently. ;)

From The Wrap by Steve Pond:

Robert Pattinson's Cannes Makeover Gets Darker and Bloodier With ‘The Rover’
Cannes 2014: David Michod's grimy road movie joins “Maps to the Stars” as an opportunity for indie-driven reinvention 
After the last couple of days at Cannes, it's easy to see why Robert Pattinson is on the cover of French Premiere with the headline “la metamorphose.” 
The two movies that have brought Pattinson to the Croisette are weird, dark, supremely edgy and nothing like what we might expect from an actor who became famous as the vampire dude in the “Twilight” movies. 
His reinvention (at least when he strays into the indie world) is indeed a metamorphosis. And Cannes has become an accessory to his intriguing makeover, which actually started a couple of years ago when he came to the festival with David Cronenberg's austere and arty “Cosmopolis.” 
This year, he's back with Cronenberg's “Maps to the Stars” and David Michod's “The Rover” which premiered on back-to-back days at Cannes. Both are bloody, brutal and strange, and both are terrific.

And the remarkable thing is that “Maps to the Stars,” in which Pattinson plays a chauffeur driver and aspiring actor who ends up having sex with Julianne Moore in the back seat of his car before almost everybody in the whole movie self-destructs spectacularly, turns out to be only the runner-up in the competition to see which of Pattinson's Cannes movies is darker and edgier. 
The dark ‘n’ edgy crown really goes to “The Rover,” a brutally brilliant and brilliantly brutal post-apocalyptic road movie that crawls along creepily before periodically erupting into violence. Nobody in this movie walks away clean – but then, nobody walks in clean, either.
That's hardly a surprise, given that Michod burst on the festival scene in 2010 when he took the black and provocative crime drama “Animal Kingdom” to Sundance, starting a run that gave him some real heat and landed Jacki Weaver an Oscar nomination. 
“The Rover,” which is screening out of competition and will be released in the U.S. by A24, is more ambitious than that tightly-wound family-that-kills-together story. Set in a grimy time described only as “10 years after the collapse,” his new film creates a vision of a ravaged future in which nothing is shiny and everyone you meet will happily rip you off, rob you blind or leave you in a pool of blood. 
A lone traveler played by Guy Pearce has his car stolen at the beginning of the film and leaves a trail of bodies as he tries to get it back; early in the journey, he picks up a passenger in Pattinson, a none-too-bright drifter with a drawl, a dopey grin and a few of his own reasons for making the trip. 
Of course, you can't make a road movie about a savage post-industrial, post-disaster Australia without summoning up the ghosts of “Mad Max” and “The Road Warrior” (if not “Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome,” which occupies its own ignoble niche). But George Miller's '70s and '80s movies had better cars, more stylish wardrobes and much more of an action-flick sensibility; Michod isn't afraid to rachet up the tension with long stretches in which not much happens. 
(What is it with brutal minimalism at this year's Cannes? Lisandro Alonso's Un Certain Regard entry “Jouja,” with Viggo Mortensen as a Danish officer trekking through the South American looking for his daughter, hits some of the same notes but is so minimalist as to qualify as an art project as much as a movie.) 
Pearce is an excellent anchor for this angry trip through a vicious and parched landscape, but we knew he would be. But Pattinson, who Cronenberg sometimes seemed to use specifically because of a certain blankness (particularly in “Cosmopolis”), gets a weird and meaty role and turns out to know what to do with it. 
While “The Rover” played at a Cannes screening on Monday afternoon, incidentally, high winds buffeted the canvas sails and panels that made up part of the salle de Soixantieme screening room. At times it sounded as if the building was about to come down in some massive conflagration – and they couldn't have been showing a more appropriate movie if it did.
Thank you, Deb, for the screen cap!
 
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