Friday, April 2, 2010

Out of the Vampire’s Shadow...Robert Pattinson

As Hollywood’s hottest prop­erty, Robert Pat­tin­son doesn’t need to sit around wait­ing for the phone to ring.


Sift­ing through a moun­tain of scripts and try­ing to nav­i­gate a sat­is­fy­ing career path, while every­one wants a piece of him, will be a more famil­iar scenario.

With the whole world watch­ing his every move, how did the star of the Twi­light films decide to fol­low the smash hit New Moon with hum­ble inde­pen­dent movie Remem­ber Me?

Fairly eas­ily, it turns out.

“I never like any­thing, so it’s quite easy to decide what to do,” he admits, candidly.

“I’ve never felt any pres­sure to do any­thing, par­tic­u­larly. Even when we were shoot­ing it I never thought about the box office.”

It may be far from his mind, but Pat­tin­son, known as R-Patz to his ador­ing fans, is cer­tainly box office-friendly. Pro­pelled to star­dom as the pale and mys­te­ri­ous vam­pire Edward Cullen, he now inspires hys­te­ria when­ever he steps out in public.

Today is no excep­tion, and jour­nal­ists prepar­ing to grill him about his lat­est release have had to wait patiently as he works the red car­pet out­side the film’s pre­miere in London’s Leices­ter Square, sign­ing auto­graph after auto­graph for over­whelmed fans.

In per­son, he is unde­ni­ably good look­ing, with a strik­ing bone struc­ture, tou­sled hair and cheeks decid­edly rosier than those of his vam­pire alter ego.

He is also rather self-deprecating, and has a ten­dency to back­track and cor­rect him­self while he’s speak­ing. Even so, he seems to know his own mind when it comes to career choices.

“I had read tonnes and tonnes of scripts over the sum­mer after I did Twi­light, I mean hun­dreds, and every­thing seemed exactly the same.

“But this one, the way the dia­logue was writ­ten, it just seemed much more nat­u­ral­is­tic than most things,” he says.

“It’s not really a feel-good movie. They don’t make movies like it any­more, I think that’s how I kind of choose stuff, that’s the only cri­te­ria I have. There seems to be a gap in the mar­ket for some­thing and I just try and do that.”

Remem­ber Me is about as far away as you can get from the fan­tas­ti­cal world of vam­pires and were­wolves that Pat­tin­son is best known for.

Set in New York, it stars the 23-year-old as Tyler Hawkins, a hand­some and some­what lost young man, who is going through life in the after­math of his brother’s suicide.

Tyler meets and falls in love Ally Craig, played by Lost’s Emi­lie de Ravin, a kin­dred spirit whose life has also been marked by fam­ily tragedy.

The film is set in 2001, the sig­nif­i­cance of which emerges later in the movie.

Although, in his own words, Tyler “starts off with a lot of bag­gage”, Pat­tin­son rejects sug­ges­tions that he’s always drawn to play­ing the “brood­ing” types.

“I did do the kind of lighter stuff before Twi­light came out and it just so hap­pened that Twi­light became so much about him being an arche­typal brood­ing per­son,” he insists.

“I never thought Tyler was that brood­ing,” he laughs.

“I hadn’t even heard the word before Twi­light. I guess you like to play bro­ken trou­bled char­ac­ters because it seems more inter­est­ing, espe­cially because I’m not par­tic­u­larly bro­ken and trou­bled myself.”

As well as being a love story, which fea­tures scenes racier than Twi­light fans will be used to see­ing their heart­throb in, Remem­ber Me is the tale of Tyler’s frus­tra­tions with his father Charles, a wealthy and pow­er­ful busi­ness­man played by Pierce Brosnan.

Pat­tin­son is full of praise for his “very, very charm­ing” screen dad.

“As soon as you meet him he’s very, very charis­matic and Charles on the page is some­one who’s very dom­i­neer­ing and quite a neg­a­tive character.

“Pierce, just by being Pierce, kind of changed all that, which was great and made it a much more inter­est­ing relationship.”

Tyler also has a touch­ing rela­tion­ship with his 11-year-old sis­ter Car­o­line, played by Ruby Jerins.

Although he only has two older sis­ters him­self (“I think I always wanted a younger sib­ling – not that I have any­thing against my sis­ters!”), Pat­tin­son cred­its the young actress for mak­ing their close­ness believable.

“It’s very easy to do any­thing with her. You just look at her and you know what to do immediately.”

Tyler gets into a few punch-ups in the film, clash­ing on more than one occa­sion with Ally’s dad, played by Adaptation’s Chris Cooper.

But Pat­tin­son is typ­i­cally self-effacing when describ­ing his scenes with “a big stunt guy”.

“I hit with what I thought was my full strength. I hit his face about four times. And every time I was like ’I’m sorry, I’m sorry’ and he was like ’it’s fine. It didn’t really hurt.’ That was kind of an ego deflator.”

He admits he hasn’t been in a fight in real life “for a long time”.

“I’m too scared. I think if I got into a fight now some­one would just kill me,” he says, prompt­ing laugh­ter from the room.

“I liked a lot of the rebel­lious­ness and audac­ity of the char­ac­ter. It was kind of a fan­tasy of myself. Like ’Yeah, I’m the type of guy who ran­domly gets into fights. I do it all the time’.”

“I don’t. I’m not really,” he quickly adds.

Pat­tin­son was first linked to Remem­ber Me before he was a house­hold name, and the film’s pro­duc­ers are thank­ful his new-found star­dom didn’t turn him off the project.

In fact, an exec­u­tive pro­ducer credit for the actor is tes­ta­ment to his pas­sion for the movie.

Judg­ing by the hordes of scream­ing girls who turned out to catch a glimpse of the heart­throb at the pre­miere, the film has a ready-made audi­ence in Twilight’s huge fanbase.

And while Pat­tin­son acknowl­edges his pre­vi­ous work, and that of de Ravin, will attract more pub­lic­ity for the film, he refuses to worry about how fans will receive it.

“Obvi­ously you hope peo­ple like things but I think if you start doing stuff to please a cer­tain audi­ence then you’re going in the wrong direc­tion,” he says.

“I mean, you don’t even know the peo­ple you’re try­ing to please, espe­cially if you’re try­ing to please whole swathes of people.”

He laughs before adding: “I hope they like it.”

Remem­ber Me is released on Fri­day April 2

EXTRA TIME – ROBERT PATTINSON

Robert Pat­tin­son started act­ing in local drama group, the Barnes The­atre Club, where he took part in a pro­duc­tion of Tess of the d’Urbervilles.

He played Cedric Dig­gory in Harry Pot­ter And The Gob­let of Fire.

In Remem­ber Me, he found his Amer­i­can accent came eas­ily from just read­ing the script, although he didn’t con­sciously affect a New York one. “I’ve spent a bit of time in New York and just try and pick up on how peo­ple speak,” he says. “I don’t know where my accent is now. I wouldn’t say I had a spe­cific Lon­don accent any more.”

He has a “very, very close knit” set of friends, the same ones he’s had since he was 12.

He has no par­tic­u­lar heroes other than his fam­ily. “They’re great peo­ple and my par­ents are great par­ents and they brought me up very well, I think. That’s about all the heroes I’ve had.

via Pattinson Life