Host: What were you thinking when you cast Rob? David: You’re looking for a great actor. It’s a very difficult role with a lot of dialogue, Quite funny too. You need an actor that gets all of that.
Host: Did you know he could do it? David: I had seen him in Little Ashes where he plays a young Salvidor Dali, an extreme, difficult Spanish movie. This is a guy who’s not afraid to do something really challenging and difficult. He’s not afraid to play an unsympathetic role. Until you do the movie, you don’t know the breadth of it and I think he gives a fantastically subtle and beautifully modulated performance.
Robert Pattinson has burst the Twilight bubble and charted his career out of the vampire-infested forest into roles in Bel Ami and Cosmopolis. With his acting career now open to various directions, ET found out which actors he would like to work with in the future.
When asked what films he enjoys the most, Pattinson answered with cult filmFear and Loathing in Las Vegas (Johny Depp) and drama One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (Jack Nicholson) but also mentioned comedy film The Mask(Jim Carrey).
Although he said that he would love to work with any of the lead actors in his favorite films, he singled out Jim Carrey and revealed an interest in acting in comedies. “I love Jim Carrey. I think he’s amazing. He is one of the most consistent actors and people don’t really realize ’cause he is a comedian,” Pattinson said of Carrey.
“I love a lot of comic actors,” he continued. “I love Eddie Murphy. I want to do a film with Eddie Murphy…but I’ve never met him or anything.”
While the 26-year-old actor is content to broaden his acting roles beyondTwilight and perhaps even into comedy, he said that the franchise provided a relieving safety net that doesn’t pertain to non-franchised films.
“There was something nice about ‘Twilight’ where you could experiment in between and you could kind of take a risk and you’d always have another ‘Twilight’ movie to go back to,” he said. “When there is a safety net…you aren’t really making decisions. You are kind of like, ‘Maybe it will work, maybe it won’t, but I got another ‘Twilight’ film anyway.”
Although he enjoyed having the “safety net,” Pattison maintains that the lack of that luxury has allowed him to become a more decisive and refined actor. “Now that there [are] no more ‘Twilight’ films, I’m like, ‘This has to work.’ So it’s nice. It makes you stronger.”
Pattinson also discussed his role in Cosmopolis of a very confident and expressive man, which he said he could relate to despite being an introvert.
“It’s a strange thing to play someone who is so determined to prove that he knows what anyone else is going to say before they even say it,” he said. “He has ideas of being a savant and stuff but…he’s really lost and I think that’s what I sort of relate to about it. He doesn’t know what is going on.”
Cosmopolis debuted at the Cannes Film Festival in May and is set for release around the world this summer.
Entertainment One Films US has set a date for David Cronenberg’s “Cosmopolis.” On August 17th, the film will open in New York and Los Angeles, expanding into additional markets soon after. Based on the novel by Don DeLillo, the film stars Robert Pattinson as a 28-year old financial whiz kid who heads out in his tricked-out stretch limo to get a haircut from his father’s old barber. Along the way, he’s joined by a cast including Juliette Binoche, Sarah Gadon, Mathieu Amalric, Jay Baruchel, Emily Hampshire, Samantha Morton and Paul Giamatti. The film debuted at the Cannes Film Festival last month to mixed responses. Indiewire’s Eric Kohn said that “‘Twilight’ fans won’t respond to Pattinson’s uncharacteristic turn and only diehard Cronenberg fans are likely to spread positive word of mouth” in his review. Entertainment One is releasing the film in the US well after it does so in Canada and the UK, where release dates are set for June 8th and June 15th, respectively.
The Vancouver Sun interviews Robert Pattinson and David Cronenberg
TORONTO — Celebrated Canadian director David Cronenberg and Twilight star Robert Pattinson are hardly anti-establishment radicals.
But you would never know it from their film collaboration, Cosmopolis, which opens in theatres across Canada June 8.
Cosmopolis has already had its splashy premiere at the recent Cannes Film Festival, but the Toronto-based Cronenberg and the London-raised Pattinson are happy to be back in the city where they shot the film just last year.
Looking casual in slacks and shirts at a downtown Toronto hotel, the dapper filmmaker and handsome baseball cap-wearing leading man are making themselves available to promote the film, which exposes modern-day obsessions with greed and power.
But Cronenberg said that Cosmopolis is less an excuse for socio-political diatribes and more about an opportunity to present a fresh story. And yes, the 69-year-old understands that the film hits screens as anti-capitalist protests abound worldwide.
The movie, based on the 2003 Don DeLillo novel, tracks the bizarre day in the life of young Manhattan billionaire investor Eric Packer (Pattinson).
Robert Pattinson wasn’t expecting to star in Cosmopolis. In point of fact, he didn’t think a director like David Cronenberg would even consider him for the project.
“I never really took myself seriously as an actor before,” he says, barely awake the morning after the movie’s gala Toronto premiere. “And [then] you get cast in a movie like this, and it gets to Cannes and it’s not a total disaster, and I haven’t brought down David’s entire career…”
Cronenberg’s eyes crinkle. “We’ll see,” the director says. “That’s still in the future.”
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