Archive for the ‘Remember Me’ Category

The new romantic melodrama “Remember Me, starring Robert Pattinson (“Twilight”), was probably made under the assumption that every generation needs its own version of the classic “Rebel Without a Cause,” a movie that launched a whole cycle of melodramas about misunderstood but sensitive, lost and directionless youth.
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MONTREAL – The consensus is that Robert Pattinson has mastered the James Dean art of brooding as the sullen poster boy for the latest generation.
Pattinson’s heartthrob status has been defined by his portrayal of the conflicted vampire-in-recovery Edward Cullen in the popular Twilight film series, based on the Stephenie Meyer novels.
There was Twilight in 2008, New Moon last year, and Eclipse is set for release, to a great deal of anticipation, on June 30. Breaking Dawn, the finale, is expected to be released as two movies over the next few years.
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Robert Pattinson is taking a break from his Twilight stardom to play a rebellious New York college student in Remember Me. In the indie flick, the 23-year-old gets to explode with rage, fall in love with a girl (played by Lost’s Emilie de Ravin) and go head-to head with his domineering father (played by Pierce Brosnan).
Parade.com’s Jeanne Wolf found out what Pattinson had in common with his character’s search for identity.
Acting as therapy.
“I try and pick roles that will help me develop as a human being and I think I was going through a similar kind of experience as my character Tyler, which I guess you could call being rebellious. I thought just doing the film would actually help me to think about and discover things that would help me in my life. I was kind of using it as a therapy exercise.”
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The MP3 for the Remember Soundtrack and the score are now available on Amazon.
To get the soundtrack click here

To get the score click here

For day 4 of our Remember Me fanmade art countdown here’s a great wallpaper made by DreamySim1
Click to make it bigger

With his seemingly unwashed locks and just-rolled-out-of-bed undershirt and jeans, Robert Pattinson seems laid-back and carefree.
But the 23-year-old heartthrob, who attracts throngs of screaming fans wherever he goes, has a lot on his mind these days — not the least of which is what will happen when the “Robsession” ends.
“If it suddenly dies down and suddenly no one is interested … yeah, it is worrying,” he says. “It’s scary to think that it all might just fundamentally stop after the ‘Twilight’ thing’s finished.”
That “?‘Twilight’ thing” is the more than $1 billion movie franchise based on Stephenie Meyer’s best-selling series. Pattinson stars as Edward Cullen, the vegetarian vampire who falls in love with human Bella Swan.
Despite the success of the first two films, “Twilight” and “New Moon,” Pattinson hopes to break away from the emo, teenage undead role with his latest project, “Remember Me,” which opens Friday. The drama stars Pattinson and Emilie de Ravin as 20-somethings falling in love while coping with family tragedy. Pierce Brosnan and Chris Cooper co-star.
Here, Pattinson, also an executive producer of the film, talks nude scenes, being idolized and what he fears most in life.
Q. Did you feel a lot of pressure choosing “Remember Me,” because it’s the first time we’re seeing you post-“Twilight”?
A. I just always liked the script. When I was making it, I didn’t even think about it. Now that it’s being released, it comes into context with all of that.
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The rest of scans and translation HERE
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Drifting far from his Vampire mode in the Twilight films (but not too far), Robert Pattinson proves he doesn’t “suck” in a straight dramatic role and affectingly portrays a tortured young man with family issues who finds love with an equally wounded young woman in a romance underlined by past and impending tragedies. The name of Pattinson above the title will guarantee a large femme turnout for this brooding, PG13 drama, and although it’s no Rebel Without A Cause or Splendor In The Grass for a new generation, it has enough tender and genuine moments of youthful angst and romantic discovery that opening weekend figures should be sweet, word of mouth decent and a healthy afterlife on DVD assured.
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This review contain MAJOR spoilers from the movie
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