KRISTEN STEWART & TARILER LAUTNER OM NEW MOON!



MTV: Kristen, in your opinion, how is the relationship between Bella and Jacob in "New Moon" different than the one between Edward and Bella in "Twilight"?

Kristen Stewart: It's such a different relationship; it's like entirely original.

MTV: It seems much more playful.

Stewart: Yeah, exactly. They're light; they actually have fun with each other. Edward and Bella are always so strange, you know?

Taylor Lautner: It's always so tense.

Stewart: And only he can bring her out of that rut. Like, she literally is going to die; she's going to stop eating and be done. And the only thing that brings her out of it is this lightness [Jacob] brings.

MTV: What is one of the main things you're eager for us to see when "New Moon" hits theaters in November?

Lautner: I think the biggest thing you learn is that I disappear for a while, and she starts going through a separate depression. You go into a depression — would you call it that? — when I leave.

Stewart: Oh my God, yeah.

Lautner: Then she comes back to discover that I'm a werewolf, so that's the big boom. Yeah, I get to transform into a werewolf a couple times, which is awesome.

MTV: What was the stunt work like in those scenes?

Lautner: Well, Jacob's thing is he actually can transform in midair. So I got to do these really cool stunts where I got to actually run and then they'd hook me up on wires and I'd jump up in the air and then I'd come to a jolting stop and have to hang there for a bit. That's what you saw in the trailer, actually. That was a lot of fun. I get to do a lot of cool stunts in this one.

Stewart: That cute, little, fuzzy wolf.

MTV: He is very huggable. Tell us about one scene that you read either in Stephenie Meyer's book or in Melissa Rosenberg's screenplay that you were like, "Man, that's going to be tough to pull off," and tell us how you were able to figure it out.

Stewart: "New Moon" is riddled with all of that. I think it's the one book in the series that I was intimidated by — in a good way. That's the best feeling to start a movie with. But probably, my favorite line in the book is when I have to say to [Jacob], "It's him; it's always been him!" Like, I have to say that. Yeah, it killed me, it killed me.

MTV: It was a tough day to shoot?

Stewart: Yeah, and just like everything in our movie, it's such a heightened version of reality. It's like, people don't just break up [in the "Twilight" films] — they break up and it literally kills you. It's not like you just say, "Oh, I'm really depressed and crying." Everything is supposed to be a fantasy version of that. So I always had a really hard time figuring out, "Am I doing enough? Do I look like I'm going to die?"

MTV: Yeah, it would be tough to be the most dramatic person in the world, but without being cheesy. And Taylor?

Lautner: ["New Moon"] is very complicated. There's a lot of heartbreak, there's a lot of things going on. Edward leaves at the beginning, she goes into this depression, I come to try and bring her out of it. Then I go through my own issues, and then she leaves me. It's all over the place, and there's a lot going on, and there's many of those scenes that you described.

MTV: Which was your favorite to shoot?

Lautner: My favorite one was — well, we call it the breakup scene — but it's the scene right after she sees me shirtless and I've cut off my hair, all different for the first time. I have to tell her that we can't be friends anymore.

Stewart: He attempts to break up with me — but it doesn't work out.



Edi Gathegi pratar New Moon!


Intervju med Justin Chon + artikel!



Ja kunde inte lägga ut intervjun här på bloggen så on ni vill titta på den, klicka här!

Artikeln:

The Twilight Saga has vampires, werewolves and humans. Funny humans. Actor Justin Chon has a sharp sense of humor, and, as he sat down for lunch on Monday at the appropriately named Bella Cucina in Hollywood with RadarOnline.com, he revealed some major scoop about the third Twilight movie Eclipse.

First of all, Justin is heading to Vancouver on Tuesday with Michael Welch, Christian Serratos and Anna Kendrick to join the rest of the cast and he told RadarOnline.com the exclusive detail that they are "not just going to be in the cafeteria," for all their scenes in Eclipse!

Click here to see the Twilight cast having fun in Vancouver

Second, the actor who plays Eric Yorkie always has his script with him and has already memorized all his lines for Eclipse.

Third, just like Taylor Lautner and Kellan Lutz, he wanted to become a buff 30 pounds heavier for his scene and tease Rob Pattinson in the cafeteria, threatening "Edward, whatcha gonna do now?"

Check out what other scoop Justin revealed as he chowed down on some yummy spaghetti during the lunch interview.



Radio-intervju med Julia Jones!

En radio-intervju med Julia Jones som ska spela Leah Clearwater!
Man får veta lite mer om henne och mycet annat ;)




Källa

Intervjuder med BooBoo Stewart!

Jag fick ta klippet som var på youtube eftersom det inte funka annars :/
BooBoo säger faktiskt att det blir 5 filmer och inte 4!! :D
Vad tror ni?






Intervju med Kristen Stewart + bilder!



Jag hitta inte hela intervjun så jag fick ta den som var på Twilightnews! Tack twilightnews! <3


En del av intervjun:

Dazed Digital: You are in the midst of becoming a huge star. There's a truckload of paparazzi outside the door right now.
Kristen Stewart: Yeah, but you can't think about it too much because if you think about it too much it is this weird and dreamy fantasy land - you think - ‘ what the hell absurd thing are we doing at 3 o'clock in the morning, with 300 people- pretending to be other people, what the fuck are we doing?


DD: The paparazzi thing is only since Twilight, right?
Kristen Stewart: Yeah since Twilight. That's the only reason they're out there. They find out where I am from the Internet - from Twitter, man! Anyone who wants to know where I am at any given time just has to go on Twitter, it's so ridiculous!


DD: I assume playing Joan Jett is a lot different experience from Twilight?
Kristen Stewart: It's so much fun. She's the ultimate badass. She was the first woman to start her own record label. Everybody threw her out after the Runaways and was like, ‘Sorry girl, your shticks over', she was like ‘No, the message stays the same people still want to hear it.'

Who the f*** did that before her? The music industry is brutal. Once there's one wave, one explosion of a type of music, everyone jumps on the bandwagon and tries to emulate that, so there's a bunch of shitty versions of other bands. So there's like shitty versions of everybody!


DD: You identify with this role in more ways than one, I'm sure. The film and music industry are not so far apart.
Kristen Stewart: Yeah, it's been awesome working on this. I've gotten to do a lot of great roles recently. I just made a film in New Orleans- and its going to sound funny because I play a 16 year old street kid prostitute stripper - but it's the one film so far I mostly identify with. I play such a child, like she has the emotional stability of a 5 year old; she's in her own little world that she had to close off at a certain point. She's at that point where she's not quite over the edge like a lot of those people, and I met a lot of them in New Orleans, talking to people who had done the job for so long.

They're gone. Like I hate to say that, there is a part of them that is dead inside and it is so sad they can still live a happy life or whatever, but that part is. So she's not dead, she's still whole. She's just really broken and she needs to be put back together, and she needs this guy. James Gandolfini plays this plumber who is grieving the loss of his daughter and is dead inside as well, so she is sort of the catalyst of his awakening and subsequent reuniting with his wife, like she comes out of the house after 8 years. Like this vulgar really fully kid who has her own problems greater than theirs ends up helping to get them to a place where they can continue their lives.

It was the greatest experience on a movie I have ever had. Everyone was tight and it was the greatest crew, Jake Scott, the director, is Ridley Scott's son. For some reason on that one, I didn't stop thinking all day. Now, keep in mind, I had a perfect upbringing, but I know what that feels in some way, to be this character. It was really hard. But they're really funny and they make the most of it. They're really great characters.


DD: Is that the best thing about being an actress, playing roles like that.
Kristen Stewart: That and also I meet so many amazing people and I get to work with my friends.


DD: You have any aspirations to do anything else?
Kristen Stewart: I know that will just naturally become other things, other than just acting in movies. I don't know what the f*** I'm going to do. I write shit or whatever. I am going to make my own movies with my friends, absolutely, and I might not only act in them. But really? I love this, I love what I do, I am definitely going to keep doing it if I feel this way about it. That could stop, but until then, I'm just going to just write, make movies, play music.

 







Intervju med Chris Weitz!



Director Chris Weitz

Chris Weitz, the director behind American Pie, takes his turn with the fan-crazed Twilight franchise on New Moon. Right now, he's on crunch time, working the fastest he's ever worked to hit his deadlines, and have the film ready for release this November. "We're kind of moving at light speed, but still trying to deliver something that's very elegant and beautiful," Weitz says.

We discuss the forthcoming soundtrack, working with Taylor Lautner, Dakota Fanning and Michael Sheen, and possibly returning to direct Breaking Dawn. For someone who's in the spotlight of the Twilight frenzy (something akin to Beatlemania), he remains calm, collected and refreshingly humble.


Q. What do you have planned for the soundtrack?
Weitz: Alexandre Desplat has just started working on his music for the film, and we are just starting to put together what bands are gonna be on the soundtrack. So it's kind of like keeping ten plates spinning at once. I am surprised and pleased at some of the bands that have said that they're interested. It's kind of great. I mean the criterion will still always be what's right for the movie at that given moment, but Thom Yorke is interested. We might, if we're very lucky, get Kings of Leon to do something. So it's exciting to be able to have access to this kind of talent.


Q. How did you approach your vision of the Volturi?
Weitz: No matter how strange one of the characters is in a work of fantasy, I think you have to approach them as people. You start to think, well, they've been around for 2,000 years. How would they live? How would they interact with one another? The conclusion really was that after 2,000 years, you would probably be more than mildly insane, no matter how cultured or gracious you appear on the surface. I think that's what Michael Sheen really managed to convey in portraying Aro, the head of the Volturi. On the surface he's terribly gracious, warm, a wonderful host, and yet at the same time he's absolutely lethal and frightening, and it's also what Dakota (Fanning) conveys as Jane. In appearance, she's a very innocent, harmless looking teenager, but she's absolutely deadly. The first thing that I wanted to do was to put them in a setting that wasn't Dracula's castle. There have been so many vampire movies and werewolf movies and horror movies in which everything is dark and dreary, and instead for their headquarters to be surprisingly light and crisp, then the characters they play have a tactile reality to them, in spite of how bizarre their situation is, really.


Q. During the three-way-date scene, Bella, Mike and Jacob see a movie called Face Punch. How'd you get the name for that and what did Stephenie Meyer think?
Weitz: You'd be shocked at the number of stupid action movie names that have been turned into movies. I eventually submitted a list of 10 to Summit's lawyers and they had to see which ones they could go and clear. Face Punch was one of two out of 10 that could actually be cleared, and I chose that over Kill Hunt. So now someone can actually go and make Kill Hunt, but Face Punch is ours. There was always a joke between me and my brother that there should be a movie called Face Punch, which was just about people punching each other in the face. [Stephenie] gave me a t-shirt with the Face Punch logo on it, so I think she was just kind of tickled about the name of the movie.

 

Q. What kind of pressure do you feel with the crazy fan base and this pop-culture phenomenon?
Weitz: I think it's largely self-imposed, because the fans are tremendously supportive and very kind. One thing that's interesting about the Twilight fans is that they're not like fanboys, in the sense that they start cynical. They actually begin from the point of view of being enthusiastic and wanting things to be good and to be done well. But I do feel a tremendous amount of responsibility, more to the readership than to the movie franchise in a way, because I think that that's the core experience that you're trying to get at. So that meant kind of keeping in very good touch with Stephanie and, without trying to second guess one's self, always thinking about things with a degree of loyalty to that.


Q. What was your favorite scene to film?

Weitz: In a way, it's the scenes that you dread the most, because they are so time consuming and you have to get it just right, like the Volturi headquarters or the stuff that was shot in Montepulciano. It is the high point of the movie, when Bella goes to try to stop Edward from killing himself. We had 1,000 extras in this medieval town square in Tuscany in the most beautiful country on earth. It's just such an extraordinary opportunity to get to work there. And it was also kind of surreal, because every Twilight fan who could make it from all over continental Europe and further had gotten by hook or by crook to Montepulciano and booked hotel rooms, sometimes in the very hotel at which the cast and crew were staying. So there was this kind of weird Beatlemania going on in this very small, beautiful hill town. It was incredibly gratifying – people would applaud after every single take, whether or not we had screwed it up. They had no idea because they weren't close enough to hear. But if you looked down any alley, you'd see hundreds of these young girls, who came to just touch a piece of what they really loved.



Q. How are you passing the torch to director David Slade for Eclipse?

Weitz: David Slade came in while we were still shooting the end of New Moon and I showed him everything that I could to give him a sense of what direction we were going. He's going to take it whichever way he wants to, but just as I was inheriting certain things from (Twilight director) Catherine Hardwicke, he's going to inherit certain things from me and make the choice as to whether he wants to keep them or alter them. So we've had discussions about them. (Phil) Tippett (visual effects supervisor) is going to create the wolves for Eclipse, so there's a continuity in terms of the look of the werewolves, and obviously the cast is going to remain the same. So Dakota is Jane and all the Volturi are the same people that we're familiar with.



Q. Rumors are going around that the proposal at the end of the movie is cut out.

Weitz: It hasn't been cut out. I can tell you that much. It's not going to hit them in exactly the way that they think it's going to, but I will say that it's going to be quite special. I kind of saved all of my gusto for that moment. I don't think it'll disappoint.


Q. Fans are already saying they want you to return to direct Breaking Dawn. What do you think of that?

Weitz: I think it's really charming that not having seen New Moon people would be enthusiastic about me wanting to do Breaking Dawn. I think the proof is in the pudding and they should see New Moon before they decide they want me to do anything else to do with their series, but I would hope to earn that kind of rumor. I spend all my time avoiding the Internet because I end up getting into arguments with 15-year-olds in Germany, and I need to concentrate on making the movie. So I don't even know the positive rumors out there. I'm just kind of trying to do the best job I can, but it's really sweet that people would like me to do that.


Intervju med Ashley Greene

Ashley Greene Returns for New Moon

 
“Because since we know each other so well, it is kind of a no-brainer,” she said. “We already have this kind of chemistry, so it wasn’t hard at all. I was kind of wondering about that, but we are such close friends and we definitely had a platonic relationship, so going and playing romantic, I was wondering if it was going to be harder or easier, but because we are already so comfortable with each other, it was actually less awkward than with someone I didn’t know.” 

It might get tougher as she moves into Eclipse but Greene isn’t there yet. “I just got the script, about three days ago, so I haven’t had a lot of time to really dig into it. But I will, I’ll go and work with my coach and bounce ideas off of her. But it’s kind of nice, because we are playing the same characters and we’re just moving on with them and digging through different layers, so I feel like the hard part of it is kind of over and we’re just having fun with it. But I’m excited about a lot of it, but I don’t want to give anything away.” 

Going through the fandom of Twilight is a common experience few people could share outside the Twilight world. “Obviously, I can’t speak on anybody else’s behalf, because I don’t know, but I think that we are all definitely looking at each other going, ‘What is going on? What do you do? Does it happen to you?’ so it’s very nice to have someone right there going through the same thing as you and to be able to relate to it. And, yeah, I think it’s had a tremendous effect on how close we’ve all become.” 

Still, even Greene knows why Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart have become sex symbols. “Personally, for me, it how genuine they both are. They are both very authentic people and that comes across on the screen. Their chemistry is really incredible, together, and individually, as well.
They are just like that for a reason.” 



Intervju med Justine Wachsberger

Justine Wachsberger

Den är värld att läsa! Mycket intressant, Justine nämner t.e.x vad hon brukar göra på fritiden, hennes favorit program och mycket mer!

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Have you read the Twilight books?

Justine Wachsberger: Yeah, all four of them. 

Had you read them before you got the role? 

Justine Wachsberger: I had seen Twilight, and read briefly the first one. After I got the part, I obviously read New Moon, Eclipse, and Breaking Dawn.


How long were you filming for?

Justine Wachsberger: For a week, approximately. 

Does your role follow the character from the book closely?

Justine Wachsberger: Yeah, it pretty much does. Gianna is a complex character in a sense that you don't really know what her motivations are for working for the Volturi. You don't really understand her motivations in the book, and I feel like the movie lets that mystery go on. 


Did you get to hang out with the cast at all?

Justine Wachsberger: Yeah, we all have really early call times. Even though the tabloids depict it as if they're going out every night partying, that's not actually really the case. Yeah, we hang out after the day is done shooting. No big partying. At least not when I was there. 

Do you know if you're going to be back in any of the future films?

Justine Wachsberger: I'm supposed to be back in Breaking Dawn

What kind of things do you do in your spare time?

Justine Wachsberger: I like hiking. I go hiking in the morning. Just hang out with friends, go see a movie. I don't do anything crazy. I do yoga classes. 

What are your favorite TV shows?

Justine Wachsberger: I loved Harper's Island. I'm a big fan of True Blood and my guilty pleasure- Gossip Girl. 

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För hela intervjun klicka här!


Intervju med Kristen Stewart!

Stewart arrived with a heroin chic look, probably because of the movie she’s filming ‘The Runaways’. She completely avoided any visual contact with the journalists interviewing her.


I’ve been told that it’s because the actress is extremely shy and doesn’t like certain aspects of her job.


We still managed to talk to her about the dificulties of her character in this sequel and this is what she said: “In this movie the only way we can see Edward is through the very subjective point of view of Bella. It’s only through her memory that the character is present, so he doesn’t have to be there physically.


This movie is much more emotional than the first, I can promise you that. Anyone who’s read the books knows that the second book is much more intense than the first because unlike Twilight, New Moon is not about your first love.

In this movie, Bella presents herself as a manic depressive person and my challenge was asking myself ‘How Can I get this character to come out of that state she’s in? And how can I play a character who’s going through that process? It was very hard to portray a young woman who’s getting over the hard blows she gets from life and how she grows up after them.

I know that in my career I haven’t been involved in many projects that have generated so much expectation as Twilight and I just have to confess that I’m just another fan of the project. I get so excited to see how the movie is wrapping up, what the first trailers look like, etc.

I know that fans are worried that Edward is not in this movie that much, but trust me, you’ll see him enough, and if the character Edward Cullen didn’t leave, then how were we going to miss him?” concludes the actress.

 

Källa: NMM


Intevju med Jodelle/ Team Edward!

Taylor Lautner, Jodelle Ferland, Robert Pattinson, New Moon


E! hade nyligen en intervju med Jodelle som kommer spela en vampyr i Eclipse.
Hon berättar också att hon är Team Edward!
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Jodelle Ferland has been sworn to secrecy. She's not allowed to say much about the part she just landed in the third Twilight movie, Eclipse.

"I'm allowed to tell people that I play a vampire who has just been turned," the 14-year-old Canadian actress tells me. "In other words, I'm a newborn vampire. I'm not allowed to say the name of the character."

So if she won't say whether her character is Team Edward or Team Jacob, what's her pick in real life?

It's Team Edward all the way for Jodelle.

Keep reading to find out why...

"I just think if maybe Jacob had been introduced first then everybody would like him better," she said. "It just seems that since Edward was the first one to be with Bella, people want him to stay with her. So, you know, that's the character that you start to like first! And then Jacob comes into the picture and everybody's like, 'Oh, no! Stay with Edward.'"

Jodelle says she's "really, really excited to meet Robert Pattinson." As are her friends. "Every single person I've told has asked me if they could come to the set," she said, adding with a laugh, "I've said, 'I'll have to think about that.'"

How did Jodelle celebrate snagging a part in what's destined to be one of the most successful movie franchises ever?

"You know, I was just thinking about that yesterday," she said. "I was just thinking that I haven't done anything yet. I need to think of something. Basically, I just jumped up and down and then I went into my room and watched a movie on my mini-DVD player.

"Actually, it wasn't a movie," she continued. "I was watching The Addams Family—the old ones, not the movie."

That sounds like a suitably ghoulish celebration for what could be the start of a monster career.



Intervju med Noot Seear!

After half a life as a model, 25-year-old Noot Seear is now a vampire. And not just any vampire: aTwilight vampire, the true proof of immortality, film and otherwise. In the forthcoming New Moon, the second installment in the rabidly popular teen series, Seear plays Heidi, a crazy-hot bloodsucker who lures tourists to her coven. When we sat down with her, the British Columbia native admitted she's more grunge than Goth. She spilled a few details about her show-stopping scene in the film. She told us the amusing story behind her name. And she assured us she's not going to let a childhood full of embarrassing Halloween costumes get in her way.

DARRELL HARTMAN: So, what did you have to do to look the part?

NOOT SEEAR: I didn't tan for two months. It was awful, and totally unnecessary because they painted me white anyway. And I had these crazy contacts that I couldn't see through. It was like skiing in a total snowstorm. I could see about two feet in front of me.

DH: What about the wardrobe?

NS: It was this red, flowy dress with high gloves and big old heels.

DH: A dress? It's a miniskirt in the book.

NS: I know! I didn't get to show much leg.

DH: Heidi's scene, in the book at least, is short but awesome. Tell me about filming it.

NS: The sets were breathtaking. Huge, like palace-sized. I think the scariest part for me, out of the whole day, was that they had given me lines to practice, and when I showed up they gave me completely different lines. I freaked out. Dan [Cudmore] was like, "Calm down, it's okay." They're so protective over the script. But it was really cool because the day I shot everyone was there: Dakota, Rob, Kristen. I got to meet everyone and they were so nice to me. I was scared they were going to not be nice.

DH: You've been a model half your life. How did you get into it?

NS: Looking back on it, I was way too young to be in New York on my own. I was 13. I'd just finished eighth grade, and I hated school. I'd gone to maybe 13 different schools in eight years. I met this agent and we went to New York and I started working right away, with Mario Sorrenti. And that was it. I was a stubborn little girl; I didn't want to go back to school. I started home-schooling and stayed in new York.

DH: Do you feel like you missed certain key parts of adolescence?

NS: I definitely missed out things like prom and spring break, but I think I gained a lot more by traveling all around the world. I feel like I had a head start on life. I've had 12 years of working in and adult world, being taken seriously, having to show up to work on time, whereas if I'd gone through the school system I'd just be finding my own feet right now. But there were cons.

DH: Such as?

NS: You're thrown into this adult world and you're alone all the time. You go to work alone, stay in hotels alone.

DH: And—I have to ask, since we're talking Twilight–maybe not much opportunity for teen romance?

NS: No. That's one terrible thing about this industry: there's a lot of predator men. You have to be very careful. But I was very lucky.  I've had the same manager for 12 years now, and she guided me and made sure I was making the right decisions.

DH: When did the acting thing start?

NS: I always wanted to be an actress. I've been taking acting lessons for years with Alan Savage. But he would never let me audition for anything. He was like, "You get one chance with these casting directors, and if you go in there and do a bad reading they're never going to call you in for anything else." So he made me wait, and he was right. Instead of having to play some hot girl on some dude's arm, this role came along.

DH: I hear you're moving to the West Coast.

NS: I am. This movie has opened up so many doors for me: I'm working on a couple indie movies I think are going to happen. And I got my driver's license two months ago, so I can finally drive.

DH: Are you going to miss New York?

NS: I've had this crazy-long successful career in New York. Twelve years! Most models, they come in and get so overexposed. They're shooting every campaign, they make a lot of money, and then two years later everyone's done with them. My agent always turns down jobs for me because she wanted to make sure I was always fresh. I never became a name.

DH: Speaking of: You were born Renata. How did you become Noot?

NS: It was from a nursery rhyme my mom used to sing. Am I gonna have to sing it?

DH: Yes.

 

 

NS: I have been trying to be Renata forever. I still try to be Renata. Every time I would change schools, I would always start as Renata and somehow switch to Noot. And when I moved to New York, there was a really big model named Renata and she was at my agency. Now I can't get rid of it. It's the most ridiculous name. 

DH: On the Web somewhere, a commenter pointed out that it's Dutch for "nut." 

NS: It is! Everyone thinks I'm Dutch, but when I go over to Amsterdam they're like, "What? What's your name? Nut? Like, a crazy?"

DH: Did you ever have a Goth phase?

NS: Definitely grunge, but not Goth. But there are parts to being a vampire that I can really relate to. My character's 300 years old and sometimes I feel like I've lived that long.

DH:  What books did you read as a teenager?

NS: I was a bit of a comic nerd. There was a comic I read called Battle Angel Alita. She was amazing—this half-girl, half-robot who used to race, but with fighting. And I really liked Robotech and Japanime, stuff like that.

DH: You were just at Comicon to promote New Moon, right?

NS: It was amazing. I think it was that point where it actually hit me, what a big production I'm involved in.

DH: What did it, exactly?

NS: The screaming. The pitch of the screams. I've never heard screaming that loud, by so many girls, at once. There would be screaming, and then if Rob would just move his hair or Jacob would gesture to someone, the pitch would go up a little.

DH: Did anyone recognize you when you walked through the convention center at Comicon?

NS: No, but I was with a couple people from the cast, and they had to wear disguises. Like, wigs and glasses and hats.

DH: And it worked?

NS: Yes! Surprisingly.

DH: Was Robert Pattinson with you?

NS: No, he didn't stay. But he would have to wear disguises, yes, or he would get swarmed by screaming women.

DH: And were any of the fanboys, Trekkies, etc. surprised to see a fashion model there browsing comic books?

NS: Not really. I think they were so amazed by the video games and new high-tech toys that the last thing on their mind was a pretty girl.


Intervju med Robert Pattinson!

 

Twilight star Robert Pattinson finds being lusted after such hard work, he never stays in the same place for more than 20 minutes.

The 23-year-old Brit has become a sensation as the cold Edward Cullen in vampire movie Twilight.

This week, he took the Hottie award at the Teen Choice Awards - with Megan Fox winning the female equivalent - and was voted the sexiest man in the world ahead of Brad Pitt, and David Beckham in a Glamour magazine poll.

It means Robert is mobbed wherever he goes by screaming girls, especially since the explosion of social networking site Twitter.

 

 

"I can't remember what my normal life is like," he admitted in one of his quieter moments.

"Because of internet stuff and Twitter, there will be a crowd if you are in a place for more than half an hour.

"I've learned never to stay in the same place for more than 20 minutes."

He laughed, seemingly still amazed at the Beatles-like level of fandom he has following him.

While many would love that kind of adulation, anyone watching Robert when doing interviews will see he finds the situation difficult to deal with.

 

The actor, who become a teen pin-up as Cedric Diggory in Harry Potter films The Goblet of Fire and The Order of the Phoenix, hates watching himself on screen and even had a panic attack at the premiere of Twilight.

"The biggest challenge is coping with the crowds," he admitted. "I am a quiet, private person. It's strange.You have to change a little bit.

 

"Walking down the street comes with screaming. I still can't watch myself either. I have always been like that. Watching myself at the Twilight premiere was a mistake.

"I had never watched anything of myself since Harry Potter.

"But I went to it because my whole family was coming to see it.

"Nothing comes other than this pure discomfort.

 

"I can't watch myself. I am just feeling everybody else's reaction. I can't handle that at all."

However, Robert claims he's not shy when he's on set - it's only when the film is finished he feels uncomfortable.

But he claims he doesn't care about how he looks, although he seems to be contradicting himself.

Surely if he didn't care, he would be happy to watch himself? He said: "It seems pointless watching it.You get a big ego or you become depressed. So I avoid it altogether."

 

Away from packed cinemas is also a difficult time for the actor - and not just because of ego. In June, he was hit by a taxi in NewYork while trying to run away from screaming girls.

During filming for Twilight follow-up New Moon, there were claims he was being protected by the NewYork police and Robert admits he prefers it when there are big crowds because there will be security on hand.

"But when you are by yourself, your paranoia runs and runs," he said.

 

Perhaps not the sentiment of the cool vampire he plays in Twilight and the sequel - which will be released in cinemas in November.

The film, already a huge hit as a book, took 11 gongs at the Teen Choice Awards, with Robert winning Best Hottie and Best Actor.

In the new film, there's a love triangle between vampire Edward, his human love-interest Bella - played by rumoured girlfriend Kirsten Stewart - and werewolf Jacob Black, played by Taylor Lautner.

In the film, Robert goes topless and again that awkwardness is apparent, despite the actor working as a model for four years.

 

"I was so uncomfortable doing it," he claimed. "It really is so embarrassing," he added with a laugh.

Since the success of Twilight, Robert has played surrealist painter Salvador Dali in Little Ashes and harrowing romantic drama Remember Me, which also stars former James Bond Pierce Brosnan, a film that is due out early next year.

Fresh from playing Edward again, what does Robert make of the character he's turned into one of the world's most famous vampires? "I like playing him," said Robert, who luckily doesn't like going out in the sun, so doesn't have to worry about spoiling his deathly vampire pallor with a suntan.

 

"I don't know if I like him as a person. "He is a little straight-laced for my liking. He is not rebellious. I think that should be respected."

Robert comes across as a little straight-laced himself, and it seems he wants to rebel on screen for the time being.

He was born in London and, as his mum worked for a modelling agency, it wasn't too much of a stretch to see him modelling at 12.

However, his modelling career only lasted for four years because he claimed he began to look so much older, rather than the teen he had been.

 

Robert had also taken up amateur dramatics at the Barnes Theatre Company and, in 2004, made his television debut in Ring of the Nibelungs and in the filmVanity Fair, although his scenes were deleted and only appear in the DVD version. His role in Harry Potter followed which had critics calling him the new Jude Law. Of course, yet again, he admitted he finds quotes such as this hard to take.

 

"I am not very good at taking complements," he revealed.

"I am one of those annoying people.

If someone tells me I gave a great performance, I say, 'oh, yeah, yeah' in a not very interested way.

"But if someone says I am bad or something, thenI agree with it - although I hate it at the same time."

With the first flush of fame, Robert admitted he did check the internet to read about himself and claims it became addictive.

 

But now he calls internet gossip "toxic" adding: "You can't let yourself be dictated to by anonymous faces."

Like Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe, many people will find it hard to ever disentangle Robert with his character Edward.

And like Daniel, the Twilight star is happy, for the time being, for people to remember him for his vampire role.

He's certainly making sure it's not just in Twilight films we see him.

As well as Remember Me with Pierce Brosnan, Robert will be seen next year alongside Hugh Jackman in drama western Unbound Captives.

 

Director Brett Ratner also wants him for new comic movie Youngblood, which features a superhero team.

At last, showing a bit of steel, Robert said: "I don't think I have to prove anything to anyone.

"I don't expect anyone to give me any breaks.

"I am not one of those people who wants to scream 'give me a chance. I will show you what I can do.'"

"You know, I really don't care. "If you do this stuff, then the audience will respond. And if you can't actually play any other part, that's all right, too."

 

Luckily for Robert that doesn't look like being a problem.


ROBERT PATTINSON PÅ OMSLAGET AV TODA TEEN! (intervju)



RPattz är på omslaget av den brasiljanska tidningen 'Toda Teen'!
De har en intervju med honom som finns längre ner på detta inlägget men twifans som jag hitta intervjun skriver också att det kan finnas små stavnings fel elr annat smått  eftersom han/hon har översatt intervjun från portugisiska till engelska!



>>> How was get a role after competing with many applicants and have 75 thousand fans organizing a petition-signed for that you don't make the character? You thought: "Now I will show them what I can do?


"Yes, like ... When are you going to an audition to live what a lot of people believe to be the perfect boyfriend, you are sort of asking for this. You have to wait people to say things like: 'Who this guy thinks he is? "So I was expecting every part of the repercussion. But I tried to not paying much attention in all this. "



>>> But the reactions are great now.


"I think so. I stopped to look at the (reaction) bad. "



>>> It has a lot of girls crazy for you. How you handle that?


"I don't know. I never met with anyone, unless the people of the press. But it's strange how the girls very, very young, like, ten years old, come and say things like: 'can you bite me?'. It's very weird. "



>>> Who would you like to bite?


"I don't know if I would bite, no. I'm not like these folks who bite people ... "



>>> You went through some image training? Someone come to say: to become the star that we want you to be, you have to say that you don't have a girlfriend, have to be always beautiful and shaved,' that kind of thing?


"Yes Everyone was really angry with me because I simply left it aside. Sent us for a training of media to to say how you should answer each of the questions. And I thought: 'why? That is so stupid '... I made jokes all the time and people were annoyed with me. I received calls from everyone saying, 'what Rob is doing in the training of media? He's ruining everything. " (laughter) "



>>> What were the stupid suggestions you received in the training of media?


"Silly things . I thought very funny when they asked something to train for a interview situation and the guy faking say 'Hi Rob, I'm Bob's from CNN!' And I was like ... 'You isn't from CNN!' (Laughs). It was so stupid. But was pretty funny. "



>>> What is most important to you: be an actor or musician?


"None of them is more important. I can't really make music for a while because I think it means seems silly, especially when so many actors who have only a great movie, suddenly,says 'hey, I'm releasing an album' ... Both are important and I take it seriously. "




>>> What kind of music you play?


"I still don't know, really. It's strange because I never did a real professional recording and Catherine (Hardwicke, director of Twilight) only heard some of my things that were on mycomputer. "



>>>It's more indie rock or folk?


"More folk rock."



>>> Catherine asked you to do the song for the movie?


"I had written before. Nikki Reed (Rosalie of Twilight) gave a CD for Catherine because she wanted to hear. And then she put it in the editing of the film and said 'hey, watch this.' And I hadn't noticed that was my music playing and I said something like 'wow, this embedded well. " I thought that would be nice to do this kind of anonymously, but nobody let me do so. "



>>> How was your life before making the role of Edward?


"In 2007, I rented a nice apartment, one kind old of London where you can climb on the roof in the middle of Soho (a London neighborhood). I spent almost every day trying to playing music and record things. I was able to maintain a good rhythm, but then I did a film in Spain (Little Ashes) at the end of 2007. And everything changed ... It was the first time I had to research something. And even being a small budget film, I really get involved. Changed my views about acting. "



>>> Do you misses London?


"Yes, a lot. I was surprised about how much I miss London. "



>>> Do you pretend to be the teen vampire in the next 10 years?


"Well, I won't be that for 10 years because he doesn't get old, so I can't handle this much longer than two or three years, maybe. Because, anyway, that would be ridiculous. "



>>> Why do you think people are so interested in vampires lately?


"I don't know, is very strange. I think it's just the way the industry works ... It's weird because I think people have always liked vampires - I don't know why. "



>>> Do you like vampires?


"I like the original Nosferatu and stuff like this. It's incredible. "



>>> And your friends, are they proud of you or make more jokes about your success?


"A lot of my friends were in the London premiere and was funny because when you see something like that for the first time, when there are literally hundreds and hundreds of people screaming at you, it's very scary. And all my friends started to see that and I took a look at them and they came to ask me: 'you are okay? "(Laughs). The reaction is completely opposite of what I thought they would have... "



>>> Are you afraid that the series affects your career in a negative way and that the directors see you only as a vampire?


"I hope not. It is too early to tell. But you expect that people are not moron. (laughs). "


5-Rob curiosities


::: He confessed that, in adolescence, was obsessed with Van Morrison, a very influential musician who plays soul.


::: In the film Little Ashes, which plays the painter Salvador DalÌ, Rob kisses the actor Javier Beltr·n ... in the mouth! He said that felt strange to do the scene.


::: He is Jack Nicholson huge fan.


::: His younger sister, Lizzie, is musician. She played in a band called Aurora (the music is in the blood.) You can see some clips of her on YouTube.


::: At the time who lived alone in the Soho apartment, he needed to go to his parent's home for take a shower. "There are only two garden chairs, no carpet and no heater, much less shower," says Rob.

CATHERINE HARDWICKE PRATAR OM ROB & KRISTEN

Vem vet de är kanske mer än bara vänner...
We keep running into these Twilight people so much we're starting to run out of questions to ask them!

 

Since director Catherine Hardwicke is about to finish her crazy-ass ride on the Twilight train, we couldn't pass up an opportunity to chat with the dame director, again. Why?
Because she's friggin' unpredictable, and we effin' love it.
Cathy confirms what everyone else in the cast is too scared to say:

 

That Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart are not just friends.

 

Check out our interview with her from Sunday's Teen Choice Awards:

 

 


Your poor cast! They've all become insane tabloid targets. Do you pay attention to all the rumors?
When I'm in the airport on trips I'll look at the magazines. It's pretty wild. I feel pretty bad for everybody. You wish you could just have a life!

 

 


Some aren't exactly rumors though, like Rob and Kristen being more than "good friends." Do you like them as a couple in real life, too?
Of course! I cast them together, so obviously I think they're awesome together. There's no question about that.

 

 


Last time we chatted you told us how you knew there was something special with Robsten from the start. What exactly do you think makes them work as a couple?
I think they're both fascinating, tortured artists, which is kind of cool to be with somebody else that gets what that's like. They are both amazing with very interesting minds. So that's kind of cool, too.

 

 


Couldn't agree more. So is Breaking Dawn going to get way sexier now that Rob and Kristen are heating up?
It has to be! I mean, come on. There are feathers flying!
Whoever directs it should write some extra Robsten love scenes...
Oh yeah, yeah, they totally should!

 


Radio intervju med Ashley Greene


Hoppas ni gillar det!

Intervju med Kristen!


Det var ett tag sedan man hittade in intervju med Kristen.
Ännu en gång har jag lyckats fixa ett tillfälle att skriva ett inlägg har på bloggen :D

Intervjun:

When word leaked Stewart was shooting a new movie in downtown LA on the corner of Spring and 2nd Sts, the six girls sneaked out of home in the hope of snagging the starlet's signature.

 

The paparazzi were not far behind, elbow to elbow on the street corner with the teenyboppers attempting to get a shot of 19-year- old Stewart.

 

As a privileged, highly-respected (cough, cough) member of the media I didn't have to stand on a street corner to catch a glimpse, but was invited into the inner sanctum of Stewart's new movie, The Runaways.

 

This is not a Twilight film.

 

It is a biopic based on the drug and partying days of the 1970s teen girl band The Runaways that launched the careers of Joan Jett and Cherie Currie.

 

Stewart plays Jett, Dakota Fanning is Currie and Elvis Presley's granddaughter Danielle Riley Keough, in her first feature film, was cast as Currie's sister, Marie.

 

When you are on a set with Stewart it feels a little like standing in the heavily-fortified Green Zone in Baghdad.

 

Security is tight.

 

The cast's trailers are parked in an adjoining lot and arranged in a way to block the long lenses of the paparazzi attempting to shoot through the wire fence.

 

Photos of Stewart have become highly-profitable business because for The Runaways role she chopped off Bella's long locks and now sports Jett's trademark short, black hairdo.

 

The first Runaways star I spoke to was the very sweet Keough, who travelled the world as a model for Christian Dior and other top tier fashion houses before making her film debut in The Runaways.

 

Talk turns to the music she like to listen to.

 

"I like older music," she says.

 

"Bob Dylan, Daft Punk."

 

What about Elvis?

 

"Yeah," she laughs.

 

Fanning is almost unrecognisable as Cherie.

 

Her hair is bleach blonde, although you can see dark roots coming through.

 

What has happened to the girl that made me cry in I Am Sam?

 

"How do you like your hair?" I ask.

 

"It's a wig," she replies.

 

Ooops.

 

As the night drags on there is a rumour around set Stewart will not be available for an interview. At one point she walks out of her tailer and straight past me.

 

Not a good sign.

 

I chat with her personal assistant who assures me she will be chatting.

 

"She loves Australians," he says.

 

Stewart's mother is Australian and she has a border-collie dog named Oz.

 

"No worries cobber. She'll be right mate. I'll just crack a VB and get on the dog and bone while I wait," I say.

 

Her PA was correct, through the trailers she appears, a replica of a young Joan Jett.

 

Stewart is dressed in tight leather pants, leather jacket, sneakers and puffing on a cigarette.

 

"It is weird when you are nostalgic for a period you have never lived," Stewart, revealing her love for the 1970s, says.

 

"The 90s? Alright, whatever.

 

"The 70s? More was happening."

 

After an 18 minute chat Stewart was off to shoot a scene, protected by four large men carrying larger umbrellas.

 

The sneaky paparazzi worked out that a small laneway between the trailer compound and 2nd St where the street scene was being shot was public property, so they stood in the thoroughfare to get a shot of Stewart.

 

The fellas with the umbrellas did their best to block the cameras.

 

Over on the 2nd St Hollywood magic had turned the street into 1970s LA.

 

A shop front had been changed to Rodney Bingenheimer's, the iconic 1970s nightclub owned by the famed LA disc jockey.

 

1970s cars are parked along the street, including a mint condition Charger.

 

Leaning on the Charger is Nick Eversman, a skinny 23-year-old actor cast as Rocker Boy, a dude who engages in a passionate kiss with Jett outside of Bingenheimer's club.

 

This is a huge gig for Eversman, who proudly admits his day job is dressing up as a prawn outside of a Bubba Gump seafood restaurant adjacent to Universal Studios.

 

When I caught up with Eversman he was at the catering tent chowing down on an plate of unrecognisable food.

 

I asked the obvious question to a dude who was about to kiss the most famous teenage girl on the planet.

 

"How is your breath? Are you sure that food will not make your breath smell?" I ask.

 

"I made sure to brush my teeth today," he replies.

 

"I did bring my toothbrush with me."

 

To my surprise, Stewart and Eversman have not discussed their onscreen kiss. There is no rehearsal. When the cameras roll they will go for it.

 

"All the script says it is 'passionate'," Eversman says.

 

The second obvious question ... will tongue be involved?

 

Eversman is a gentleman.

 

He says he will wait to feel what Stewart offers.

 

If he feels tongue then he will offer his.

 

Late into the night The Runaways director Floria Sigismondi yells "action" and, with the real Joan Jett standing among the film crew, the lip action starts.

 

The teenyboppers are still on the corner hopeful of a signature.

 

The paparazzi are there to photograph Stewart and Eversman kissing so tabloid magazines can run Kristen Stewart's New Boyfriend stories.

 

The burly minders held up their large umbrellas to block the paparazzi.

 

Was there tongue or no tongue?

 

The Runaways releases next year so go buy a ticket.


Intervju med christian serratos

Hej! Jag fick tag på en dator och lyckas göra detta inlägg!
Hoppas det blev bra för jag fick göra ett snabbt inlägg eftersom jag inte har så mycket tid :(

// Nillan <3


MTV
: So, Christian, what is the favorite costume you've seen here so far at TwiCon?

Christian Serratos: I thought it was really entertaining when I saw a Harry Potter character. [Laughs.] We were like, "Whoa!"

MTV: There's also one guy dressed as a Vulcan from "Star Trek," for some reason.


Serratos
: I heard that! I want to see this. I'm interested to see all this craziness. I love all the "Twilight" stuff and all the [fans] that are in clothes and jackets. I have so many "Twilight" T-shirts, it's ridiculous. I walked out in a "Twilight" sweatshirt one time when I was trying to be incognito with Edi [Gathegi], and we were like, "Why is everyone staring? This is weird, this is more than usual." And then he was like, "Take off the 'Twilight' shirt, Christian!"


MTV
: That's really funny. I always wondered with sports stars, if you were on a baseball team, would you wear their baseball cap when you go out in public? Maybe if you were a rookie?


Serratos
: Yeah, well, I'm such a rookie. [Laughs.]


MTV
: What do you have in your "Twilight" clothes collection?


Serratos
: I have a lot of "Twilight" gear. I love the hoodies that say "vampires" and "werewolves," but I refuse to get one because I can't choose; I have to have them both. I have the Team Edward T-shirt, but I also have Team Jacob.


MTV
: Why is there no "Team Human" stuff?


Serratos
: That's what I'm saying! I think we should take it into our own hands.


MTV
: What kind of merchandise would you like to see for Angela, Mike and the other humans?


Serratos
: Probably it would be an imitation of my glasses? ... [It would be easy] going to a convention where you have to dress up, and you're like "Oh, I am dressed up!" "No you're not!" "Yes I am. I'm a human!"


MTV
: OK, so let's talk "New Moon" a little bit. How was the shoot?


Serratos
: Chris [Weitz] was amazing, like, fantastic. I was really happy working with him. We shot in Vancouver [British Columbia], which was a good change from Portland [Oregon]. I love the city Portland, and I've been back there since, but in Vancouver the weather was a lot better, and I didn't wanna die at the end of the day, because it wasn't extremely cold. I'm excited to go film "Eclipse." That's gonna be next month already - they are already cranking it out.


MTV
: And they'll be shooting that in Vancouver as well?


Serratos
: Yeah. I haven't read the script yet. I didn't bring my laptop with me, so I saw it on my phone - on my e-mail - and I was like, "I wish I could download this as an attachment, but I can't!"


MTV
: How were the re-created sets in Vancouver? Obviously, most of your stuff takes place in the school cafeteria.


Serratos
: Yeah, they did a really good job re-creating things. Obviously, we didn't have the same parking lot and everything. There were a lot of green screens and things. I don't even know how they do it.


MTV
: Was it weird walking into the "new" cafeteria with the other humans?


Serratos
: Yeah, because the cafeteria was still a cafeteria. When we walked into that cafeteria, we were like, "We're in a different country, and it still looks exactly the same!" Like, seriously, they could have just picked it up and dropped it in Vancouver. It looks identical - that was creepy until I got used to it. But the parking lot, that is what was green-screened.


MTV
: What did you think of the footage we saw at Comic-Con, of Rob as a "hallucination"?


Serratos
: I still haven't seen it; but I wanted to stay and watch it. Rob's gonna be in it a lot more [than in the book]. I really love how they did that. It was really clever.


MTV
: You seem like you're as much of a fan as an actor sometimes.


Serratos
: Oh, God, yeah. We're all "Twilight" fans. We all read the books, we all fell in love with the books - and being a
part of it is great and everything, but we want to see the footage!


Intervju med Melissa Rosenberg

ET hade in intervju med Melissa, de frågar b.l.a. vad hon tycker om att Bryce Dallas Howard ska spela Victoria i Eclipse!


ET: What can you tell us about ‘New Moon’ and ‘Eclipse’?

Melissa Rosenberg: It becomes bigger in scope. The first film was really a small romance in a way. There was the battle with James (Cam Gigandet) at the end. That was as big as it got. With ‘New Moon,’ we have the werewolf clan, we have the Vulturi — and in ‘Eclipse,’ there is an epic battle, so with every book, with every episode of the movie, it gets grander in scope, which is fun to write. What was great about that, too, is with the small story and the characters … to be able to grow with it and track it through, it has really been a great pleasure.

ET: Are you writing for the chemistry between Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart?

Melissa Rosenberg: When I wrote ‘Twilight,’ I didn’t know who was starring in it, so I wrote in a vacuum. There was some rewriting that had to be done when we knew who they were, because I had started with more of a comedic edge and it wasn’t appropriate for those actors and the tone. I lean toward the dark comedy, witness “Dexter.” So, going into ‘New Moon’ and ‘Eclipse,’ I knew who I was writing for. I knew who the characters were and what their voices were. It got even easier with ‘Eclipse.’ [Author] Stephenie Meyer’s created the character’s chemistry; and those two actors brought so much chemistry. I don’t think the movies would have been so successful without those two actors and their chemistry. ‘Twilight’ was beautifully cast.

ET: What was the set of ‘New Moon’ like?

Melissa Rosenberg: ‘New Moon’ was one of the happiest sets I have ever been on. The guy who picked me up, said, “This is a great set. [Director] Chris Weitz is a genius. It is so wonderful.” I was, “Okay, dude, you are overselling.” But I got on the set and it was just delightful. You can tell when it is uncomfortable and they are not connecting. Chris Weitz is just a Zen master. I went to him and I was, “You are so cool and calm. And everyone is so cool and calm.” He said, “You have no idea what it is going to cost me.” My husband is a director and I know what it costs him. You have to tamp down every ounce of panic and frustration in order to project this calmness. I hope Chris got a good vacation between production and post.

ET: What do you think of the recasting of Rachelle Lefevre?

Melissa Rosenberg: I love Rachelle, but Bryce Dallas Howard? It was a shame, but I think Rachelle will go on to do brilliant things. I just love her. I am sure Bryce will be great.

ET: There is a fourth book. Will the franchise continue?

Melissa Rosenberg: I can’t imagine Summit letting that go. Right now we are focused on ‘Eclipse.’ We are just about to start. I imagine there will be discussions.


Intervju med Chris!

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