An actor is born – Télérama.
Unsettling – Studio Ciné Live
Pattinson is mind-blowing – Positif
Cronenberg chose Pattinson. A brilliant idea on both counts. – Les Inrockuptibles
Robert Pattinson revels a depth more and more fascinating. – Première
An actor is born – Télérama.
Unsettling – Studio Ciné Live
Pattinson is mind-blowing – Positif
Cronenberg chose Pattinson. A brilliant idea on both counts. – Les Inrockuptibles
Robert Pattinson revels a depth more and more fascinating. – Première
We’ve done it before for the Water for Elephants, Breaking Dawn and Bel Ami premieres and we’re doing it again… We’ve made 3 different signs for those of you who will be attending the Cosmopolis Premiere in Cannes! You can print it and bring it with you to the premiere! It’s made by DreamySim1. Tip: take a marker (dark and light) with you and something hard for underneath the sign so Rob will be able to sign easily.
We’d love to see a pic of the signs at the venue and/or signed ![]()
Here’s a good Bel Ami review by The Reel bits
Robert Pattinson broods and swoons his way through this beautifully shot costume drama from a duo of theatre veterans.
Guy de Maupassant’s second novel, Bel Ami, or, The History of a Scoundrel, is ideal fodder for a cinematic costume outing. The subject of several films, including Germany’s Bel Ami (1939) and the first English-language, The Private Affairs of Bel Ami (1947), it is surprising that this hasn’t been given the lavish post-Merchant-Ivory production values until now. Yet rather than falling to the familiar roster of BBC graduates, British stage veterans Declan Donnellan and Nick Ormerod get behind the cameras for the first time for this sumptuous adaptation.
It is the 1880s in Paris, and Georges Duroy (Robert Pattinson) has just returned from the French Army after a three year stint in Algeria. All but destitute, a chance encounter with the older Charles Forestier (Philip Glenister), a newspaper editor, literally opens the door to Parisian high society. Invited to dinner at Forestier’s home, he first encounters the three women who will ultimately change his life: Madeleine (Uma Thurman), Forestier’s wife and the real brains behind the throne, helps Georges secure a job at her husband’s powerful newspaper; the flirtatious Clotilde (Christina Ricci), with whom Georges starts an affair, and the older Madame Rousset (Kristin Scott Thomas), who has connections that could make or break anybody in Paris. Georges will not stop until he at the top of their world.
Outside of the Twilight Saga franchise, star Pattinson has had little success in securing any major crossover roles, with Water for Elephants and Remember Me sharing some critical if not box office success. Bel Ami won’t be the film that proves Pattinson to be a box office draw in his own right, but it does solidify his ability to transition between genres, and his upcoming work with David Cronenberg on Cosmopolis will undoubtedly push this over the edge. While his role is largely a mixture of brooding and seducing, Pattinson is the consummate nineteenth century rogue, and perhaps the perfect choice for Georges.
Like the Paris depicted, the women are far more important than the men, and the trio of Ricci, Thurman and Scott Thomas are a force to be reckoned with. Ricci in particular, who has been struggling to find a ‘great role’ since Black Snake Moan (2006), makes a welcome return to our screens, the perfect combination of flirty ingénue and nymphette. The similarly adrift Thurman, until recently lost in a sea of Motherhood’s (2006) and My Super Ex-Girlfriend’s (2009), may occasionally come off as stilted, but this is in keeping with Madeleine’s precarious place in society. Scott Thomas is on home ground in this Franco-costume drama, but it is refreshing to see her play such a desperately clingy character, starved of affection.
A beautifully shot piece by Italian cinematographer Stefano Falivene, Bel Ami ticks all the right boxes in an adaptation of this kind. Supporting cast Glenister and the ubiquitous Colm Meaney bring a richness to this well-crafted world. Donnellan and Ormerod never reveal their stage origins in the execution, and nor does screenwriter Rachel Bennette, who reduces the complexities of Guy de Maupassant to an accessible tale of winners who take all without consequence.
Bel Ami is released in Australia on 24 May 2012 from Hopscotch. It will also received a limited release in US cinemas on 8 June 2012.
Robert Pattinson and Breaking Dawn are nominated for the Teen Choice Awards
Choice Movie: Sci-Fi/Fantasy– “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1”
Choice Movie Actor: Sci-Fi/Fantasy– Robert Pattinson, “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1”
Choice Male Hottie – Robert Pattinson
The Teen Choice Awards airs on Sunday, July 22 8:00 PM ET. Fans between the ages of 13-19 can vote once each day per category HERE
There are very positive quotes from the Cannes Director. There are a few mistakes in the article tho like the Tom Sturridge picture that they used isn’t one of Tom’s or them saying that Rob wanted the part of Jeff Buckley in the biopic. But those are mistakes from he writer of the article. The quotes are legit.
They ask Thierry if they “have the first draft of the new generation of young actors” and he replies “it’s hard to say, the competition is tough. You have to make the right choices & meet the right people. Pattinson & Stewart had the chance of rising from Twilight unlike other young actors that are as talented as they are. There are in Hollywood, young actors waiting in the shadow. The market is ruthless. But as for Pattinson& Stewart, they’re showing a remarkable maturity when it comes to their careers. And they’re wonderful in both movies.“
The article talks about Leo Dicaprio then: He managed to (almost) make people forget about Jake from Titanic. going from teenager’s walls to movie-goers shelves. Will the Twilight actors be able to finance movies that are both challenging and expensive due to their names? “It’s going on to depend on the success of their first steps in the ‘grown up’ cinema and on the power they will exerce on the screenwriter producers.” continues Thierry Frémaux. “Cannes 2012 is going to show that there is a movement to go back to the “big” American Auteur cinema. They can take advantage of it, or not. All of this is so fragile.
source Merylou via fearlessmore | via
Here’s a great new wallpaper by @Creationsjules: