Picture of Robert Pattinson with fans from today

Here’s a new Robert Pattinson, Dane DeHaan and Anton Corbijn interview with Pearl&Dean
Screencaps of Robert Pattinson’s acceptance speech from his trailer on the set of ‘Lost City of Z. You can watch his speech here

Here’s Robert Pattinson message for the premiere of LIFE at the Deauville Film Festival

Rob only
Congrats Rob for winning the New Hollywood Award!
‘The Childhood of a Leader’ reviews from the world premiere at Venice Film Festival

A striking, impressionistically filmed final sequence set some time in the future doesn’t so much answer these questions as pose new ones. Here Walker’s full orchestral soundtrack rises to a deafening pitch, mixing brass punches and string-section yelps into its driving, jackboot march. In combination with British DoP Lol Crawley’s atmospheric 35mm photography and Corbet’s assured direction of an excellent cast, it makes for an edgy, poetic mix with the dramatic potency of a good nightmare.
Here are the first two clips of Robert Pattinson’s new movie ‘The Childhood of a Leader’ which is having the world premiere at the Venice Film Festival tomorrow
New Robert Pattinson interview with NEON Magazine

Robert Pattinson (29) doesn´t want to be a Hollywood-actor only anymore – as he told Neon Magazine: “I´d like to do something aside from acting, in a field that I´ll have better control over. Last year I´ve tried various things on the sly, but I´m not going to talk about it, otherwise it will not work out!”
The glamourous Hollywood-scene is not for him, he tells Neon: “Of course there are these events where a bunch of dressed up girls hangs out. But you´d have to be a complete idiot to hook up with one of them – imagine someone sleeping with you simply because you´re famous? Women wanting to sell their time with a celebrity and running with the story to the next tabloid.”Robert Pattinson will be in cinemas next with the movie “Life” September 24th.
Neon Magazin will be on stands September 7th.
New Interview of Robert Pattinson, Dane DeHaan and Anton Corbijn with The Sunday Herald – Australia

When the actor James Dean died in a car crash in 1955, the second and defining film in his short career – Nicholas Ray’s Rebel Without a Cause – had just come out. Dean was 24.
East of Eden had put him on the map earlier that year; Giant was in the works. In retrospect, three films doesn’t seem much of a basis for what Dean was about to become: the embodiment of a generation’s bohemian disaffection with their parents’ post-war world. Fact was, however, they didn’t come any cooler than Jimmy Dean. They still don’t.
You can see that in the clutch of photographs taken of Dean for Life magazine by ambitious young Magnum newcomer Dennis Stock.