we’ve posted these before in MQ, but now they’re in HQ
Pictures of Robert Pattinson at the NYSE Now in HQ Leave a comment
New/Old Picture of Robert Pattinson with a fan in Cannes Leave a comment
New/Old Video: Part 2 of Robert Pattinson’s Interview with Orestis Andreadakis from Cannes Leave a comment
Rob’s interview starts at 12:36 and David’s at 13:29.Part 1 of the interview was posted here
source | Thanks to @calliexoxo for the heads up | Via
The cast of ”Perks Of Being A Wallflower’ jokes about Robert Pattinson with MTV After Hours Leave a comment
Cosmopolis Poster Outside A Cinema In Hong Kong 1 comment
Source: @FiFi_1001 via @Pattworld | Gossip Dance
Turkish Breaking Dawn Part 2 Poster Leave a comment
Great fanmade video of Robert Pattinson 1 comment
@SvetLanchikP sent us this great video she made of Robert Pattinson
Vote for Robert Pattinson in BBC Radio 1′s Teen Awards 2012 Leave a comment
Robert Pattinson is up for Male Hottie in BBC Radio One’s Teen Awards 2012. You can vote for him HERE.
In order to cast your vote, you must sign in to BBCiD.
New ‘Breaking Dawn – Part 2’ Poster + Old Posters now untagged Leave a comment
New ‘Breaking Dawn – Part 2’ Poster + Old ones now untagged
More after the jump Read the rest of this entry »
Amazing Cosmopolis Review by Screened Leave a comment
In the very near future of the cinematic present, a young billionaire named Eric Packer (Robert Pattinson) decides one morning that he’s going to climb into his limousine and head across Manhattan to go to the barber he insists on visiting. The city is mobbed, however, by traffic jams from the visiting President and a celebrity funeral, and the limo crawls slowly through the city over the course of a day as Packer pulls various employees and business partners into his isolated oasis as he inches his way across an increasingly desolate city in the face of a global economic crisis that mirrors his own deteriorating mindset.
That is actually as succinct a summary of David Cronenberg’s newest film,Cosmopolis, as you could ever hope to ask for. Based on a novel by the same name by Don DeLillo, Cronenberg once again delves into the inner psyche of a troubled character in a challenging drama that manages on the surface to appear intimate and small, but reveals that underneath it all lie deep waters. Like his recent masterpieces, A History of Violence and Eastern Promises,Cosmopolis is as mature and considered a drama as one could ask for. That, however, is where the similarities end, and where this review strikes out from the concrete into the strange territory of this nightmare road trip.























