Showing posts sorted by relevance for query vanity fair. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query vanity fair. Sort by date Show all posts

Michael K. (DListed) Analyzes Vanity Fair Picture

As Moon from Letters to Twilight/Letters to Rob says: I'd marry Michael K if he weren't flaming :))

From DListed:

The Keeper of the Unicorn Forest even brings the raw sparkly emotion when he's got a lobster bib tied around his neck and an ear of corn in his hand. Look at him smoldering out of his every pore. I don't know if he wants to throw that corn into a fire or seductively breathe onto its neck (yes, corn cobs have necks) like he's ready to suck an orgasm out of it.

That corn just wants to dry up and pop into a bowl of buttery popcorn. Maybe then RPattz will be pleased with it? Who knows, but I do know that I need to see more dramatic performances like this when I go to Red Lobster. We shouldn't laugh and smile over lobsters. We must brooooooood.

Anyway, RPattz did a whole lot of simmering in December's Vanity Fair. The shoot was typical RPattz. In one photo, he's like "Oh hey, look at me! I'm James Dean." And in another, he's like "Oh hey, look at me! I'm using a piano like an ottoman." Etc...Etc....

In the interview with Vanity Fair, RPattz once again denies that he's rubbing on that Kristen Stewart chick. RPattz said, “It doesn’t make any difference what you say to the tabloids. I’ve literally been across the country from Kristen, and it’s like ‘Oh, they were on secret dates!’ It’s like ‘Where? I can’t get out of my hotel room!’ 

I believe him. I mean, he doesn't have time to fuck on girls when he's too busy pondering over things like corn.

Previously: Michael K. weighs in on "Robert Pattinson's I can't get a date quote"

Check out DListed for more sarcastic hilarity :)

Robert Pattinson is #15 in Vanity Fair's top 40 earners of 2010

Robert Pattinson is #15 in Vanity Fair's top 40 earners of 2010

Updated via Robstenation:
What Rob earned on Bel Ami. Located in the upper right corner next to Kristen Stewart's box.

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Well we know he's not going to get Twilight dollars for non-Twilight movies just yet but 1.5 million for Water For Elephants? Boooooo.

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You're priceless to us, Rob :)

This was found in the new Hollywood issue of Vanity Fair.

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Thanks Deb for the tip!

Source

Robert Pattinson Chats To Alfonso Cuaron At The Vanity Fair Party

Robert Pattinson Chats To Alfonso Cuaron At The Vanity Fair Party 

Another New pic of Rob from the Vanity Fair Party in Cannes last night. This time he's chatting to Alfonso Cuaron.
If you missed all the other pics from the party, check them out HERE

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Click for Larger

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Source VanityFair

Robert Pattinson In Brazilian "Marie Claire" Magazine - Article Translation




Robert Pattinson: Impossible to Avoid, Impossible to dislike

By Mariane Morisawa (Translated by ViviLitt )

"New Moon", the second part of the saga "Twilight", hits theaters around the world on Friday (20). You may think: "Forget it, this is for teenagers". But you will not be able to escape the wave that will sweep the planet. And I suspect - actually, I know - that a lot of women (in their 20's, 30's, 40's ...) love the series written by Stephenie Meyer. Plus, they love Robert Pattinson, the actor who plays the vampire Edward Cullen.

I did not understand why so much confusion, until I watched, way later than most, the first film (about two months ago). As a movie, "Twilight" is really bad. Neither the special effects and makeup are good, something serious in a production about vampires. But it was easy to understand why the fever. Edward Cullen is a romantic vampire, without that extreme self-confidence that these beings often have. He falls for awkward teen Bella (the equally awkward Kristen Stewart). He really fears, however, not being able to resist his impulses and hurt her. Worse, he fears that she is hurt by any of the other vampires. The parallel between blood and sex is explicit here. But this makes him a dream lover of any teenager.

That's not all. Everyone, especially those of males, may speak ill of Robert Pattinson. 'He does not take a bath'. 'He looks like a drunk'. The truth is, however, that it has been a long time, probably since Leonardo DiCaprio, that did not appear a guy with such a hearthrob vibe. And what's wrong with that? The film industry needs it. Robert Pattinson sells. Hence the cover of Vanity Fair, a magazine that is far from being for teenagers. Hence the cover of Entertainment Weekly, the bible of the entertainment.

Intrigued, I began to look for and read the interviews of the 23 year old boy. And you know what? You cannot NOT like Robert Pattinson. First, let's agree that the boy is a little young (certainly too young for my taste) (Kate: Uh should I comment, oh go on then, less competition for me!) but really handsome - take a look at the photoshoot made by Bruce Weber for Vanity Fair and disagree if you can.

Second, he exudes great sincerity and no arrogance, so typical of youngsters who start to be successful. On the contrary, he does not take himself seriously, making fun of himself. "It sounds silly, but in many ways my hair is 75% of my performance," he told Entertainment Weekly that hit newsstands in the U.S. last Friday (13). Other than that, thinks that he is to blame, for not coping well with the harassment - that is so intense that he can not even leave the hotel room. "I'm not the kind of guy fit to be on a movie franchise. I don't like crowds" he said to Vanity Fair.
And he seems to want to be a real actor. Such that he has chosen more alternative projects, like the western directed by actress Madeleine Stowe ( "Unbound Captives") and a romantic drama with Emilie de Ravin ( "Remember Me"). For all that, you can say with ease that he has far more qualities that 90% of 23 years actors out there. So, leave the boy alone. (Kate: here, here)

Thanks ViviLitt :)

Source of original article

"Robert Pattinson Is Beautiful" - Uma Thurman In Vanity Fair (Italy)

Well there's nothing wrong with Uma's eyesight anyway. She spoke, in an interview with Vanity Fair (Italy) about "Bel Ami" and Robert Pattinson and of course she only had praise for her co-star.

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Vanity Fair: You also shot Bel Ami, by Guy de Maupassant’s novel with Robert Pattinson

Uma Thurman: Robert is beautiful. Almost more beautiful in person than on screen. He is also a good actor. He will make a great career, there will not be only Twilight in his career

Thanks to robertpattinsonmoms for the translation

NEW Robert Pattinson Vanity Fair Outtakes

Thanks to Vanity Fair for this AMAZING photoshoot! Vanity Fair is on stands NOW, pick up a copy and laminate it :)














Robert Pattinson On The Cover Of "Vanity Fair" (Italy) & Preview Of Interview (Translated)

Robert Pattinson On The Cover Of "Vanity Fair" (Italy) & Preview Of Interview (Translated)

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Excerpt from the interview
This is translated using Google Translate so you know the drill!

In Cosmopolis - premiering at Cannes - Pattinson keeps the pallor that made girls all over the world fall in love with him, the romantic air of Edward, however, has disappeared. (...)

Do you have any idea why David Cronenberg chose you?
"Honestly, no. But I have never asked: I am just glad he did. "(...)

In Cosmopolis the sex scenes are quite explicit: has it proved embarrassing?.
"More than anything I was nervous for the actresses. When a man gets undressed he stupid, but he's basically having fun. I think for a woman is something different, more problematic. "

In real life, are you more sweet or passionate?
"Passionate, I hope." (...)

One of your best friends, the British actor Tom Sturridge, is expecting a child by Sienna Miller. Do you want to become a father?
"Sure. I don't know just yet, but definitely yes. "

Have you already made ​​plans with Kristen?
"Not yet. We have nothing planned. "

Do you feel ready to go live with her?
"(He hums, to mask the embarrassment) I'm ready for anything."

The full interview on n. 30 of Vanity Fair on newsstands May 23.

Source VanityFair via Source
Thanks to Bru for the tip!

365 Days of Robert Pattinson: August 6 ~ Vanity Fair Photoshoot Pic

365 Days of Robert Pattinson: August 6 ~ Vanity Fair Photoshoot Pic

Oh man....Vanity Fair 2009 (are we ignoring 2011? lol). It's highly regarded and many say the best photoshoot. Not only was the spread gorgeous, we never got another publication officially releasing 100 outtakes for us! Except for mine, all the pics we used were from those amazing outtakes. So much goodness and a classic shoot in our ROBsessed world.

Kate:
"I’m cheating today {blush} I narrowed it down to these 3 (it wasn’t easy) and just couldn’t choose between them. I love them all for different reasons. The first one makes me smile (and the dog is super cute). The second one, WELL HELLO it’s obvious. And the 3rd one makes me think about that scene from Bridget Jones Diary where Colin Firth reads Bridget’s Diary and leaves the apartment, Bridget thinks he’s gone for good and chases after him down the street in her knickers. When she eventually catches up with him, he ends up wrapping his coat around her (you know the scene I’m talking about!). Well that’s why I like this pic. I think being wrapped like that in Rob’s coat would be very cozy indeed ;-)"
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Tink:
"this pic owned me when it first came out. it was the first time i stopped my desktop slide show and let one pic be on my screen for awhile. it's so romantic and Rob looks so handsome. i see my sternocleidomastoidporn too. put on some classical piano music and stare at this picture. see what it does to you. you wont be sorry. ;)"
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Kat:
"Rawwwwwwr!"

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If you post your 365DoR links in the comments, give us time to approve them so the DR can see :) 

Click for HQ!

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Robert Pattinson is a Stand Up Gentleman Says Vanity Fair Photographer



Vanity Fair photographer Bruce Weber talks about Robert Pattinson in the magazine's latest issue:

Of actor, minor deity, and V.F. cover subject Robert Pattinson, Weber says, “If I had a kid brother, I would want him to be just like Robert. He’s a stand-up gentleman with a firm handshake, and he writes good music too. I hope I bump into him again so we can go to a pub, have a few beers, and take some pictures.”

Check here for great deals on Vanity Fair!

Thanks MrPattinson.com and JittzPattzing :)

*NEW* Photo From The "Vanity Fair" Photoshoot - Robert Pattinson Sings The Blues

I'm so greedy, I'm not happy with a new Robert Pattinson Pic from the "Vanity Fair" photoshoot I want video! I want to HEAR him sing.I need to hear him sing. I know, I'm so demanding!
Patience is a virtue, right? But you better not be teasing me with this pic and then say there's no video!

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Sing us a song, piano man—let’s start with “Happy Birthday.” New Orleans’s Preservation Hall—where Annie Leibovitz shot young Robert Pattinson, shown tickling the ol’ 88 with the world-famous Preservation Hall band—celebrates its 50th anniversary this year. Situated in the French Quarter, the music venue is one of the country’s most hallowed: it was founded in 1961 for the purpose of preserving New Orleans–style jazz, and indigenous American music. On his first-ever visit to the Quarter, Pattinson jammed with the house band and thoroughly held his own—his celebrity perhaps subsumed by that of the musicians, whose legendary status awed everyone on set. “When we first started, none of us knew that Robert really does play piano,” says Ben Jaffe, the tuba player (center, above), the band’s director, and the son of the venue’s founders. “But when he got up there, he started ticking out these notes, and it was obvious he wasn’t just tinkling—he really knew how to play.” Though the musicians were expecting the actor to just pose, Pattinson gamely jammed along with their tunes. After finishing a song, he leaned over to Jaffe “and said, ‘That’s the first time I’ve played with a group of guys like that,’” Jaffe recalls. Not a shabby gig—especially with Jaffe’s homemade red beans and rice waiting as reward.

On the landmark birthday, Jaffe says he and the rest of the band are humbled: “It’s really momentous for us to reach this moment in our history, considering everything New Orleans has been through in the last five years,” he says. “It’s really a testament to the strength of the people of this city.” Preservation Hall endured a several-month hiatus post-Katrina and reopened in May 2006, structure miraculously intact. We say miraculously, because the hall’s charm is that it looks as though it might collapse at any moment—it’s one big happy jalopy of a 350-year-old structure, with all the glorious paint-peel-y, rusty-hinged patina of a Clementine Hunter painting. It strains at the seams with ambiance. And we hope, lack of air conditioning and all, that it never changes.

Source Vanity Fair

Thanks to Leslye for the tip :)

Old Picture of Robert Pattinson from Vanity Fair (2011) Now in HQ

Old Picture of Robert Pattinson from Vanity Fair (2011) Now in HQ

Vanity Fair really dropped the ball on outtakes for 2011 if we use 2009 as a judge. But! We have one of the best pictures from the magazine NOW in HQ :))

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SWOON, right?? Rob at the piano KILLS me. My ringtone is his Edward concerto :)

A crop for our pleasure :)

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Lick and save for HQ

HQ: Source

Robert Pattinson's interview for the San Francisco Chronicle


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Sorry, ladies. In the daylight, Robert Pattinson's skin does not sparkle like diamonds. (Kat: What a relief...) He's not even unusually pale. The closest he gets to his dreamy-vampire persona is when, during the course of conversation, he absently tousles his hair into something like his undead do. Perhaps the most surprising thing about Mr. Hunky Bloodsucker in person is how soft-spoken he is.

That is, until an unwanted visitor appears on the balcony.

"Jesus, I thought that crow was going to come in the room," he says. "That would be a bad omen!"

The large black bird has settled menacingly on the railing, facing outward but occasionally glancing over its shoulder as if to say, "I see you."

Menacing birds

"Weird," Pattinson says, laughing. "I've been having bad experiences with birds. I just got a dog and I was trying to make him pee out on the balcony and there were these enormous seagulls who have absolutely no fear of people. I genuinely thought a seagull was going to grab my dog. Terrifying."

Animals and animus are primary components in Pattinson's new film, the Depression-era romance "Water for Elephants." Pattinson plays Jacob, an erstwhile veterinary student who, after a personal tragedy, essentially runs away with the circus. There he meets performer Marlena (Reese Witherspoon), who is as enchanting as her husband, charming but imbalanced circus owner August (Christoph Waltz), is discomfiting. The web becomes more tangled when August's big new acquisition - a bull elephant - steps into it.

"I don't think there was one thing with the elephants I didn't do," Pattinson says, though not impressed with that fact. "They were pretty nice animals. Everything was pretty easy. The first time I met Tai, she was with, like, five or six other fully grown Indian elephants. They came wandering around, but they would never, ever tread on you. Even their back feet, they're so sensitive to what's going on around them. Gary, their trainer, said, 'Sit,' and all of them sat down, like how a dog sits. I just thought, however this movie comes out, I want to work with this elephant." (Kat: Note to Tai - thank you for winning over Rob so he'd sign on to this movie - another reason to love you, sweet girl.)

Soulful elephant

Even in Pattinson's rapidly growing gallery of lovely leading ladies, Tai ranks up there for beauty and soulfulness of eye. And she was apparently considerably easier a co-star than, say, the horses with which Witherspoon was matched.

"Reese got thrown off once. She got stepped on a bunch of times," Pattinson says. "I saw it happen during scenes, and she didn't say anything, continued on the scene."

He gives a close-mouthed, wide-eyed look of shock, and laughs again. "But yeah, she's pretty tough. (In one scene) the horses were running within a foot of her, and the horses do tread on you; it's nothing like the elephant. And if something goes wrong, they freak out. But she was so easy with them. The horses behaved slightly differently with her than with me. She has a thing. I have an elephant thing, she has a horse thing."

Pattinson is comfortable enough with his animal magnetism to make much of his humor self-deprecating. He acknowledges that having worked with Witherspoon previously - albeit briefly, and for naught, as his scenes were ultimately trimmed from "Vanity Fair" (2005) - was a source of comfort.

" 'Vanity Fair' was my first job and I was completely freaking out about it," he says. "She came to my trailer and said she wanted to run lines or something. She's just really sweet and easygoing. I mean, we didn't hang out or anything, but we sort of felt we knew each other when I met her again."

Odd one out

Still, he was in awe of his co-stars. "When you see Christoph and Reese and they're both Oscar winners and they're big movie stars - also, they have the big parts, they have the kind of loud parts - I'm coming into that thinking, 'I'm kind of the odd one out here, and I'm also in every single scene.' You're a little bit worried.

"She has such an amazing aura on a set. The days she was there were so different from days when she wasn't. She definitely creates a really nice vibe, and everyone's happier when she's around. They're almost depressed when it's just me," he says, laughing.

It was hard to be depressed around Waltz, however.

"He's extremely funny. He had just done that skit on Jimmy Kimmel, 'Der Humpink.' It's one of the funniest skits I've ever seen in my life," he says of meeting Waltz. For the record, "Der Humpink" is an utterly insane sketch one can find online - but afterward one might never be able to look at Col. Hans Landa of "Inglourious Basterds" the same way again ... or feel at ease about his inquiries into life on that French farm. (Kat: Runs off to search youtube....)

"He's very, very good at making anything seem sympathetic. He is kind of, in the book and in the script, just a nutcase. But I think Christoph didn't want to play that straight up," Pattinson says. "But Jacob keeps trying to steal his wife, so where's the happy ending? He's destroyed this hardworking man's business, steals his wife."

British Pattinson confesses a foreigner's fondness for the American 1930s, Depression and all, for how iconically American they seem to him. He referenced Gary Cooper films to help create his "Water for Elephants" character. But it was another American star, playing the older version of Jacob, who connected surprisingly with the young actor.

"The first thing Hal Holbrook said to me was" - Pattison takes on a pretty good Hal Holbrook croak - " 'You look exactly like me!' He came in a couple of days to watch the way I walk and stuff. 'You walk exactly the same as me. And you look like me and you sound like me.' I was looking at the pictures of him when he was younger, and he really does ... we're really similar body shapes. It's really odd. I wouldn't mind ending up like Hal Holbrook."

Water for Elephants (R) opens Friday at Bay Area theaters.

Read MORE after the cut!

IrishTimes.com

Hotter than Potter
Fri, Dec 12, 2008

Four years ago Robert Pattinson's vignette in Vanity Fair hit the cutting room floor. Now he's set to become one of the actors of the decade, taking the lead in the phenomenally successful vampire love flick, Twilight, and playing Cedric Diggory in the upcoming Harry Potter. It's all happened so fast, he tells Donald Clarke

HERE IS a sad story. Four years ago, Robert Pattinson, then just 18, secured a role in Mira Nair's lavish adaptation of Vanity Fair. When the night came for the premiere, he slapped down his unruly hair, polished his shoes and stepped out proudly for Leicester Square.

"It was my first real job," he says with a wry smile. "I went along to the premiere, but nobody had told me that I had been cut out. I didn't realise until the film ended." Happily, the story has a jolly coda.

"The casting agent was the same one who did Harry Potter. They felt so bad about it they gave me an early meeting for the next Harry Potter film. And that went well." Indeed it did. As 2009 looms, 22-year-old Robert Pattinson finds himself teetering on the brink of full-blown stardom. That meeting with the Harry Potter people went so smoothly that he secured the role of Cedric Diggory - doomed rival of the hero at the Triwizard Tournament - in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. The odd TV job and the occasional independent film followed. Then, early this year, he secured the role of Edward Cullen, teenage vampire, in the film version of Stephenie Meyer's hugely popular Twilight.

"I didn't even know there was a book series of that name," he says.

"This vampire love story thing? I had zero idea about it. It all came out of nowhere. Then they said the books had sold 25 million. I thought: 'is that a lot, 25 million worldwide?' I really didn't know."

It certainly is a lot. The Twilight books - four volumes so far - have generated a movement that strains definitions of the word "cult". Most likely, you either love Meyer's books, in which a sensitive teenager falls in with a cadre of morally upright vampires, or you have never heard of them. Unsurprisingly, Twilight fans have cornered a substantial sector of the internet for their own use. Every announcement from the studio was examined for evidence that the film-makers were daring to deviate from the sacred text.

Catherine Hardwicke, director of Thirteen and The Nativity Story, both films about teenage trauma, was signed up for megaphone duties. Kristen Stewart, rising star of Panic Room and What Just Happened, would play the sensitive heroine Bella Swan. There were rumblings at both announcements, but the news that some posh English bloke had secured the role of dishy, distant Edward unleashed a veritable tsunami of whingeing.

Was Robert unwise enough to pay attention? "I did a little bit and that was a bad idea. I won't make that mistake again," he says. "There was just universal disagreement with the decision. I suppose it was quite funny. That was my first real experience of Twilight mania. Seventy-five thousand people signed this petition saying the part should be recast. Seventy-five thousand! I do think it's funny now." When Meyers herself endorsed Pattinson, the temperature warmed somewhat.

"Whatever Stephenie says goes, I think," he says.

Most of the few wavering dissenters were won over when the film opened in the United States three weeks ago. A canny blend of gothic romance and loose-limbed naturalism, Twilight took in $7 million on midnight screenings alone. It went on to gather $70 million on its first weekend and secure the record for the biggest ever opening by a female director.

"I did Jay Leno the other day and he asked how it's been for the last few months," he says. "I had to say that it didn't explode until the previous five days. It was that fast. The other day I went in to buy a bagel in this place I normally go. There were four magazines with me on the cover. One said I was heading for a breakdown. Then I'm on Leno, looking at his iconic face. It is so weird."

Next Big Things come alone quite frequently. But I would be astonished if Robert Pattinson did not go on to become one of the most conspicuous film stars of the next decade. Fiendishly charismatic with narrow eyes and hair that obeys its own defiant rules, he combines the looks of an archetypal movie rebel with a striking intelligence that should, all being well, keep him out of the usual Hollywood catastrophes.

There were, he tells me, no actors "in his gene pool". Raised in London, the son of a businessman who imported vintage cars and a mother who worked for a modelling agency, Pattinson dabbled a little in drama as a teenager, but, when the time came to apply for university, still depressed by the Vanity Fair experience, he decided to study political science. Before he had time to fill out the form, however, he had secured the role in Harry Potter.

Pattinson walks through Twilight with the aspect of a man who is embarrassed by his own mighty power: he can fly, read minds and stop speeding motorcars. He adopts the same dazed look when considering the unusual position in which he now finds himself. He doesn't even know where he lives these days.

"I really can't answer that question," he says. "I get mail at three different addresses. I used to have a nice, tiny apartment in Soho and I miss not living out of a suitcase. But I wouldn't say I really want to put down roots either."

When Robert Pattinson was asked about his favourite films recently, he produced a list that included work by Bernard Rose and Jean-Luc Godard.

So, he's no fool. He must have some insights into the causes of the Twilight phenomenon. What's the series about? Burgeoning sexuality? The end of childhood? Some conservative critics have noted Edward's reluctance to become intimate with Bella - he's afraid he will chew on her flesh - and have decided the film is an argument for sexual abstinence.

"I don't know. That's hard to answer," he says. "Yeah. A lot of people point out that Stephenie's a Mormon and say the story must be about abstinence. I don't really think the film is about anything but itself. She didn't write the book for anybody else. She had a dream and wanted to write about the characters in that dream."

The story does seem to say something to teenage girls in particular.

"That's right. There is a clan mentality in young girls and that accelerated it. You go to a school and ask who's read the book and they all compete to say they have. That really drives success."

At any rate, the galloping popularity of the film version has ensured that adaptations of the other three books will follow. Pattinson looks set to have his life disrupted for some time to come. How will he manage to sustain friendships and romantic relationships?

"Well, I have been skipping off around the world for ages," he says. "And I have somehow managed to keep the same friends throughout all that time. We all do things where we are leaving home for ages. That's par for the course. But I never have much of a social life anyway."

It sounds as if he is ideally suited to the vampire lifestyle.

SOURCE

Part 3 Robert Pattinson Vanity Fair Outtakes






















Source Vanity Fair
 
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