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THE TWILIGHT SAGA: BREAKING DAWN PART 2 - PÅ BIO NU!

onsdag 24 mars 2010

En JÄÄÄÄÄÄTTE LÅNG INTERVJU med KStew och DFani

Tyckte det var lite kul med "KStew" och sedan "DFani" XD
dålig humor, jag vet!
här kommer iaf en meeeega intervju med tjejerna :)
MEN! om du inte orkar läsa så kan du ju lyssna istället! Klicka här för att lyssna!

Reporter: Dakota, you are at that age where teenagers are rebelling in real life, did you go through that phase at all, or is that something that you skipped right over?

Dakota: I don’t think I ever had anything to really rebel against. You know, my parents aren’t like crazy-strict parents, they’re really good parents, I don’t ever want to rebel against them or anything. Um, I guess I just do that in films, I suppose. (laughs) I guess I did skip over that. Whatever that really means, you know? I think we all rebel against something at some point, but I never had a stage that I went through where I was a bad kid.

Reporter: This movie, we found both of your characters with found fame kind of thrust upon them at a very early age, and sort of dealing with how wild and unexpected that can be, was that something that either of you were able to relate to in any capacity?

Kristen: I think they sought out their fame so aggressively that it was a completely different thing. Its not like it was thrust upon them at all, it was like such an exciting thing then. They make statements. Musicians really are themselves all the time in a public way and we’re not, we’re actors. It’s not that we don’t have anything to say, we choose movies for a million different reasons and some of them are because they say things, but not the way music does, not the way you can so directly. And so I think that, I don’t know, they can take more credit for it. I’m sort of like, “Oh, this is really cool, I’m really lucky” and they are like “we own this” so…

Dakota: And also like back then, you had to do something really important to become famous and like that’s what you wanted and now, I feel like, you can do anything and become famous, do you know what I mean?

Kristen: Yeah, it’s not embarrassing to me, but it’s sort of like it’s not as cool anymore. (Laughs) It’s totally not as cool anymore.

Reporter: Tell us a little about when you first saw the script. Because as writers, or people who are interested in The Runaways, well Kristen Stewart and Dakota Fanning, wow, it seems like such an odd choice, but you guys nailed the parts absolutely! Tell me about the first time you read the script and you knew this was absolutely something you have got to be a part of.

Dakota: Well, I read the script and then I didn’t know a lot about The Runaways so I looked at the Live In Japan videos of them performing and specifically, Cherry Bomb was the first one I saw and that was when I realized that I wanted to play her. They weren’t sure if I was old enough and/ or if I was right for it and…

Kristen: which was ridiculous. Seriously.

Dakota: (laughs) So I was lucky that they believed that I could do it.

Kristen: You do a movie for a million reasons, like I said, but someone just had to say to me, “Hey, do you wanna play Joan Jett” and I was like, “Yeah” [puts both thumbs up]. Then I got really freaked out afterward because you realize all of the stuff that goes along with that.

Reporter: Did either of you have any musical background? Play any guitar or anything before you became part of this band?

Kristen: Yeah, I played guitar luckily, ‘cuz we only had two weeks to learn all of the stuff.
Dakota: I had some before, but it was something that really scared me so I was nervous about that. And I was nervous that I had to do it myself, but I wanted to it myself, but I was worried.

ME: What was the difference between playing real people that you can still meet and talk to as opposed to reading for a character that’s on paper, that you can make your own?

Kristen: It’s totally different because you never feel like you can, well I never did, as much as Joan wanted to give me freedom and have me be natural, I couldn’t improve stuff as easily as I could on other movies. I didn’t like to fill in the blanks, I didn’t like to answer questions, I was always just asking them. So, that’s a totally different thing but you should always feel like your character is real, you know what I mean? You should always feel like there is a whole person to do justice. But it’s totally different when they are right there and you’re friends with them and this is the most important part of their little lives, their complete [interrupts self] God, written down that’s going to sound so stupid, but this started everything for them, or for Joan, so it was important to get it right.

Reporter: Was there a time when she gave you advice and you were like, “that’s why she’s Joan Jett” Because it’s rare to be able to talk to the actual person you are embodying, so were there any little tips she gave you?

Dakota: Yeah, with Cherie we talked a lot about like why it all ended for her and why she decided to leave because that’s pretty important in the movie for her, for my character. I don’t know if she really gave me any specific advice…

Kristen: Well, you have this whole long experience with someone and there’s a million things that come out

Dakota: that they tell you, deep emotional things.

Kristen: Yeah, I think just being around people like that, Joan never… I mean this is something you say about people when their cool people all the time, but to a T, the most I’ve ever seen anyone be comfortable with themselves. Joan is comfortable with who she is, even though she is shy and she’s not always what she might seem like, which is just really bad ass and awesome.

Reporter: It seems that both of the characters and their desire to start the band, I mean it felt like teenager to me, for various reasons, problems at home and I think in the case of Joan, the character felt like it was always at a constant boiling point and in the case of Cherie, it feels like something that is percolating and slowly kind of expanding. I wonder from the two of you, was it hard to channel that kind of rage because it feels, in both of your performances, you carry it in the eyes and you can feel it coming out of them until it just becomes the explosive crescendo that we see at the end of the movie, so to speak.

Kristen: I think Joan’s desire to make the sound that she makes and to be who she is was so strong, especially when she was that age because you’re a teenager and like you said, you’re sort of bubbling with it, with whatever you are. Because nobody wanted to see… If I had to go through high school and did the Bowie thing (reference to movie) and threw paper, I would cry. So it wasn’t hard at all, because we are that age and I can really relate to people thinking that you’re weird. I so admire and love these women that and I could just as angry as they got in high school because I’m defensive of them, do you know what I mean? So it wasn’t hard, no.

Dakota: And for Cherie, I mean she grew up in the shadow of her twin sister and Marie was always the prettier one, the more popular one and Cherie was always the outcast. There’s a story and it’s from someone who went to high school with them. He said he walked by this beautiful girl and she was so nice and smiled and he saw her and she was scowling and he realized that the smiling one was Marie and the scowling one was Cherie and that’s kind of how she was and I think that the talent show and the performance of Cherry Bomb are the two times that she steps out and isn’t afraid to be different and she finally feels like she’s made something of herself and I really admired that in her.

Reporter: There was some really great style in the film and Dakota, you had mentioned some trepidation as to singing the songs but I was wondering about donning Cherie’s famous corset and walking out on set, was there any trepidation there?

Dakota: I was most excited about wearing that actually. (laughs) I really loved the corset because it was exactly like the one she wore, to a T. I felt the most like Cherie, I felt the most in character in the corset. Because I think if you do know who Cherie Currie is, you think of her performing Cherry Bomb in that corset, so that was really an exciting moment for me.

Reporter: You play characters who are a bit darker and the subject matter is a bit riskier and more dangerous than some of the other projects you have been in. How was it being able to play characters who explored some darker and more destructive territory?

Kristen: [pause] I feel like every character I have played has been… I mean in round-tables I’m always asked why I play a disaffected teen all the time, you know what I mean. Well I’m a teenager, and I like roles that are thought out and interesting and not one-dimensional frame girls. [grabs paper on table] You might as well take the character name off and write “girl.” [imitating crossing something off of paper] Like cute girl, ugly girl, hot girl, you know what I mean? So, that’s just the way it goes, I like stuff that gets you thinking.

Dakota: Yeah, I’ve just always been drawn to more intense, emotional story lines and characters that are actually going through something that could help someone else and give. I feel like all the characters you play, there is someone out there that is just like them, and for this one, there was someone on the set, but, I just like giving that person a voice that may not have had one before.
Reporter: I actually saw The Runaways a few times and you guys got it! Was it hard, you know, going back, oh God, thirty years, thirty five years, however long ago that was and playing someone in an era that you didn’t have any ideas-all history. How did you go back to that time?Dakota: I mean, I think that’s why I wanted Cherie there and to be able to get to know her as best as I could and to talk to her and because Cherie and Joan were really the only people who could really tell us about how it was.

Kristen: Yeah, because there aren’t…there’s a lot of photos, but there’s not a lot of footage and they really jump out of every picture but you can’t capture someone’s actual essence. I mean you don’t know how they move, and so we needed Cherie and Joan around, which was good. And I’ve always loved and been really nostalgic for the 70’s even though I’ve never, obviously, lived in them. So I was excited to live in the 70’s for a while.

Reporter: On that same note, whenever and actor or actress plays a real person, there is always that fine line that people talk about of “is it actual portrayal or impersonating the person.” How do you keep from crossing that line and what’s the difference, or is there a difference?

Dakota: Well for me, Cherie is really different from how she was, so it was kind of impossible to do an impersonation of her. So, like I had said, I watched a lot of the Live In Japan videos and I thought that the performances were the most important to be how she was and that could almost be an impersonation, because its a, the Cherry Bomb dance, she did the same thing every time she performed…

Kristen: It would only be an impersonation if you were thinking about nothing while you were doing it.

Dakota: Right, but no, I did want it to become so ingrained in my body that I didn’t have to think about it, because that’s how it became for her. So it did get to the point where I would start and finish and not remember how I got there, which was actually pretty exciting.

Reporter: After playing Darby Crash, Shane West has pretty much joined The Germs and has been playing shows all over the place with them. Is there any chance you are going to start performing as The Runaways?

Kristen: (deep breath) No. [whole room laughs.]

Dakota: No.

Kristen: Just go on YouTube, they will be better on YouTube, than we will be in person.

Reporter: You have worked with some fantastic directors over both of your careers, going from those, to an indie production with a first-time director, talk a little about the environment that Floria (director) had for you guys, um supportive, whatever the case may be, as opposed to someone who has been doing it twenty, thirty years.

Dakota: I’ve worked with a lot of first time directors, actually. [Playing with strings of her hair] On the set, I knew that Floria was going to make it look amazing, I knew it would be so visual and just because of her background in music videos and her photography and also…

Kristen: She puts you at ease.

Dakota: Yeah.

Kristen: Because we are doing ridiculous things, and if it doesn’t look right we are going to look like fools.

Dakota: And I knew it would look really authentic and she also loves music and the music of this era and I knew she would capture that as well, so I think I felt really comfortable and safe that it wasn’t going to look silly or weird, do you know what I mean? I knew that she would really put it together and it would look amazing once it was all done.

Reporter: Speaking of that with her background of music videos etc., knowing lots of musicians, did she have anyone come in, outside of Joan and Cherie, other musicians from that era or maybe modern rockers to hang out with, give advice? Oh, and what was the soundtracks you were listening to whilst preparing…

Kristen: (laughs) that’s a good one, whilst. [room laughs.] I would just say “while”…

Reporter: Ok, fine.

Kristen: NO, NO, NO, I should, and I want to adopt that is what I’m saying.

Reporter: It sounds so much more educated.

Kristen: Yeah,

Dakota: Yes! Definitely. Umm, she didn’t bring anybody, I mean her husband is in The Living Things and so I actually, she wanted me to come feel what it was like to have an entire band behind your voice, which I was SO nervous for.

Kristen: Yeah, I couldn’t believe you did that.

Dakota: You don’t understand, I morphed into a different human being before, I was SOOO nervous.

Kristen: She (Dakota) doesn’t get nervous, that’s the difference.

Dakota: But I really was for that. It was actually helpful to feel what that was like. So…

Kristen: (To Dakota) What did you guys play?

Dakota: California Paradise, Cherry Bomb, yeah, no I was freaking out.

Kristen: [at same time as previous statement] Oh my gosh, that’ so crazy, that’s freaking crazy.

Dakota: But it was actually really helpful.

Kristen: But other than that, I don’t think that, I mean Rodney came to set.

Dakota: Oh yeah, Rodney.

Kristen: And Kim (Fowley) was there.

Dakota: We met Kim and that might me it.

Kristen: I think that might me it.

Dakota: And we listened or I listened to a lot of The Runaways and Joan while we were filming.

Kristen: Yeah

Dakota: And David Bowie.

Reporter: Were you familiar with them at all before you started doing the movie? Had you The Runaways, Joan or any of that?

Dakota:
I definitely heard Joan.

Kristen: Yeah, but no. I hadn’t even heard Cherry Bomb, to be honest.

Reporter: really?

Dakota:
Nope. I don’t think a lot of our generation…

Kristen: many of us had. And I mean, I like old music too. I think it’s crazy that we don’t know about them. You know, because they were the first girls to do that, its just insane. It’s not something that’s common knowledge.

ME: Well who is someone who is in your iPod right now that you are listening to?

Kristen: (laughs) someone’s in my iPod? [room laughs, reporter says, they're not trapped in a box]

ME: Musician, artist, it’s an all encompassing title there. [room still giggling]

Reporter: What’s on Kristen Stewart’s play list?

Kristen: I would never do that. (laughs) Only because, um, it changes all the time and it’s so defining and people are going to be like, “oh” and I hate that idea. [room laughs again]

Reporter: but you could actually sell albums for them! [room laughs]

Kristen: (laughs) that’s true, but who are you into now? (to Dakota)

Dakota: I didn’t even bring my iPod, like I’m really bad with music, I get really into it and then I don’t. Like while I was filming the movie, I was the most into it that I have ever been. I’m really nostalgic for making the film and I loved making the film so much so, I loved listening to the same kind of music as it, it brings me back to that experience.

ME: So you were listening to a lot of the 70’s music then while you were filming? Just all kinds of 70’s music is what you are saying, while you were making the film? Or just The Runaways?

Kristen:
No, we were listening to The Stooges and

Dakota: Yeah,

Kristen: Joan would put together little play lists for us and stuff.

Dakota: The makeup trailer.

Kristen: Yeah, the makeup trailer was pumpin’.

Reporter: Did you feel like you grew up? It’s not a typical film that’s two weeks or even a year and you are playing teenagers in that pivotal time in your life, so do you feel older, wiser, more rock n roll?

Dakota:
I definitely relate a lot of the experiences that I have now to Joan and Cherie, or to the movie. I feel like me, Kristen, Joan and Cherie all share something that is really unique and I think that has changed me, with these relationships and the experience… I won’t be the same after knowing these people and knowing and portraying their story.

Kristen: Yeah, I feel like every experience on a movie changes you a little bit. And this one was like…uh

Dakota: It’s really hard to describe, actually how it is.

Kristen: Yeah, yeah. But the fact that I have someone in my life now, and a few people I guess, but with Joan, I can pick up the phone at any time and be like, [imitating phone call] “dude, I am tripping out,” [room giggles] or that’s probably a bad choice of words, especially right now, but “I’m freaking out.” And she’s totally there, and that’s a cool things, and how it’s changed me, I don’t know how to be specific about it, but it definitely has. I mean, definitely made me more confident.

Handler in background: one more question.

Reporter: There’s this idea in the film that the look is the most important thing and then after that, comes the attitude and then talent, even though these women were really talented. Does it feel the same way in the film industry sometimes?


Kristen:
Wait, wait, wait, I’m sorry, what?

Reporter again: The look, you know how the look comes first, or like you have to get the look right and then attitude comes and then the talent comes last even though that’s probably the most important thing. Does it ever feel like that for you all in the film industry?

Kristen: I feel like you have to be something before anyone is going to look at what you are wearing. I don’t know, I’m really lucky. I get to work with really cool people all the time and I don’t care, yeah I don’t have, I mean, (to Dakota) do you have an answer for that?

Dakota: I mean, I started out when I was 6, so it was a different thing. I think when you start out, maybe when you are older…

Kristen: Yeah, I was 9.
Dakota: You start out now, maybe it would be different, but starting out at 6, I don’t really know what it would be like, ‘cuz I started out when I was really young. The roles were so different, you know I was playing the little girl, so I don’t know what it’s like to start out as an adult or a young person.

Handler in backgound: Thank you guys.

Me and other reporters: thank you.

Kristen: Bye guys.

Me: Nice to meet you.

Dakota:
Nice to meet you.

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`Cherry Bomb´ the most streaming video on MTV.com


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2 nya EW-outtakes på KStew :)


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Charlie Bewley på Shipley & Halmos At Confederacy!





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Catherine Hardwicke hyllad på Female Eye Film Festival :D

“One thing that we’ve noticed over the years is that female directors often make a transition from other parts of the industry. (Catherine) has a background in production design and art direction, and she evolved her skillet to the next level. She’s had a huge hit (with Twilight) but she’s also made an impact in the political arena — she didn’t direct the sequel. She’s a woman who has made her bones in a difficult industry.”

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Twilightsource's analys av postrarna :)


Twilight: Simple and to the point. Twilight is the story of Edward and Bella. Edward is swooping in to become a part of Bella’s life.

New Moon: Jacob is taking on a larger role in this film. The poster clearly explains that Jacob is getting in the way of the Edward and Bella romance we saw (and loved) in Twilight.

Eclipse: In this film, Bella has to make a choice on her own. This poster shows that Bella will have to decide whether she wants to be with Edward or Jacob. It also shows that this film will be darker than the first two. We see many darker colors throughout the poster that weren’t used for Twilight or New Moon.


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Stewart och Fanning i en lååång intervju :)

USA Today’s Whitney Matheson recently interviewed Kristen Stewart and Dakota Fanning for the Runaways at the South By Southwest Film Festival in Austin, TX.
Before we hop to it, perhaps I should set the scene: This conversation took place in a hotel conference room, where the two stars were brought in by several publicists and bodyguards. Stewart spent much of the time doodling an octopus on a legal pad. After eight minutes, they were escorted out of the room.
Our chat is below. Kristen took her octopus on her way out.

Me: Well, since we’re at South by Southwest, one thing a lot of people want me to ask is what music you’re into right now.
Stewart: Right. I listen to The Shins and Radiohead and Interpol. And we saw Band of Horses last night, and that was awesome, because they’re, like, my favorite band right now. I love Camera Obscura and Jenny Lewis. I’m just pumping ‘em out — I never do this! I’m always like, “Oh, I don’t answer that question.”

Me: It’s a hard one.
Fanning: I really hate that question. It scares me, it makes me nervous. Because I think people judge you a lot on the music that you listen to.
Stewart: It’s so defining. Which is why people want to know, because it does say a lot about you.
Fanning: They want to categorize you.

Me: Well, those are good. And you saw Band of Horses, I almost went to that show.
Stewart: And Broken Social Scene. You seriously missed out. The chick from Metric came out and played one song with them. A long, anthem-y-type thing … it was awesome.

Me: Oh, well. OK, next question! This is from Lauren: Would you ever consider being in a band yourself?
Fanning: I don’t think so. I can only sing or perform if I’m playing a character and able to hide behind that character, so I would be too afraid to do it as myself.
Stewart: I love music so much. I play guitar, and I love playing it with my friends. But I hate the idea of something that’s mine … I’m used to making movies and having people take that from me. But to have my thing be somebody else’s experience right now … I could never be in a band. I feel the same way. I could only ever do that playing someone else.

Me: So you’re not going to release an album?
Stewart: Oh, no.

Me: Here’s one from Lynn: How much did the costuming, makeup, etc. help in the process of channeling these awesome female rockers?
Fanning: I think it helped me a lot, just because Cherie’s costumes are so out there and unique to her. Even the way the clothes were made back then, just because a lot of the stuff was vintage — just that feeling was really cool to have. I loved getting to see a picture of her and then look like that. I’ve always wanted to play a real person, so it was neat for me.

Me: Julissa asks, if you were to form the ultimate rock band, with musicians from today and of the past, who would you include?
Stewart: Oh, no. I answered the music that I listened to! I can’t even begin to try to make a band in my head. (Laughs)

Me: Do you have an all-time favorite guitarist?
Stewart: I don’t. I really actually don’t. It would take a really long time for me to think of the kind of band I’d wanna make, how they’d complement one another … it’s too loaded.

Me: Well, let’s move on to one from Tom: What’s the coolest stuff you’ve gotten from fans?
Stewart: I got a really cool jacket once. And I was freezing, so I really needed a jacket. That was really nice.
Fanning: I always get really cool gifts from Japanese fans. They always send me really cute things you can’t find in America. They’re usually Hello Kitty, and I love Hello Kitty, so …
Stewart: You do?
Fanning: Yeah.
Stewart: OK. That’s so funny. (Laughs)
Fanning: And you know, like stationery stores that have the walls of pens and things like that? I love that kind of stuff …
Stewart: You are Japanese.
(A publicist tells me we have a minute left)

Me: Caro wants to know if you watch your own movies.
Stewart: I kind of wish that we’d went to (the Austin Runaways screening).
Fanning: We’ve seen it five times.
Stewart: But I wish we went to that one because we heard it was really great, it was a real audience. It wasn’t movie people. Some actors are like, ‘Oh, I don’t watch the movie.’ But I have to see what happened. I have to see what we did.
Fanning: I look forward to it.
Stewart: Yeah, me too. I have to see everything done. But usually it’s hard for me. And it’s hard for me to watch this, too — like, there are parts that make me wanna kill myself. But I love the story so much. And I love the music. So I like to watch it.

Me: You know, most of the questions I got for this interview were from women, which I think is great. What do you think about that, and have you noticed a difference between the Twilight fans and Runaways fans?
Stewart: They’re both widely female, which is unique in the business because everyone says — and it is true — there’s not a whole lot of material for a female-driven audience. I would say they’re kind of similar … It’s empowering to read these stories. I feel like both of them are very bold girl stories.

Me: Thanks, guys.

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Nytt klipp från TR :)



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Jackson Rathbone & Kids choice Awards :D





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Ash på gång med nya roller :)

Greene who is famous for playing the role of everyone’s favorite little sister Alice Cullen in The Twilight Saga, says: ‘I’ve done things, I didn’t know I could do”.
The apparition in question is an evil force, unleashed by a university experiment, that haunts a young couple. Greene said the film will deliver the scares that have been missing from recent horror movies.
“With Apparition, they’re going back to doing elevated thriller,” Greene said in an exclusive interview on March 16 in Austin, Texas, where her film Skateland played at the South by Southwest film festival. “It’s not going to be that slash-gore movie. It’s that thing that just scares you to the core, and it’s terrifying.”
Still not convinced? Well, consider that in most horror movies you can yell at the screen “Don’t go in there” and the characters won’t listen to you. You might not be scared for people making bad decisions. Greene promises that her character in The Apparition makes the right choices but gets screwed anyway.
“The way that I can best explain it is that we do everything that a normal person would do,” Green said. “Everyone is going to watch it and say, ‘Do this!’ And that’s what we’re going to do. Unfortunately, it doesn’t solve things, and we’re still having to deal with them. I think that’s the scariest part, is when you do everything that you should do and you still end up ruined.”
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Chaske pratar Eclipse :)

Niteside spoke with Chaske Spencer (aka Sam Uley) about Eclipse at the Steve Madden Music and Star Magazine Present A Live Concert by Iyaz on Tuesday night, March 23rd.
“It’s darker and there’s a lot more action — the werewolves and vampires team up,” Spencer told Niteside at the Steve Madden Music and Iyaz bash Tuesday evening.
Spencer said the more guy-friendly “Eclipse” may make the third “Twilight” film the most successful installment of the series.
“‘New Moon’ had one of the biggest opening days in history,” he said. “I think ‘Eclipse’ is going to probably surpass that, and I think a lot of guys can go see it. There’s a lot more action,” he said.
Despite the legions of the Twihards swarming the globe, Spencer lives in relative anonymity in NYC and is more into the downtown music scene. The actor, who has lived in the city for 12 years, plays the drums and hangs out with indie bands like 5 O’Clock Heroes (which has collaborated with model Agyness Deyn) and Unisex Salon.
“I’m in New York and nobody knows who I am. If they do they don’t bother me. I still go to the same places, I hang out with the same crowd,” said Spencer, who still frequents haunts on the Lower East Side. “You’ll find me stumbling around here somewhere.”
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Lutz och Fancinelli på Twi-tour!








Check out the new pictures and video of Eclipse cast members Peter Facinelli (aka Carlisle Cullen) and Kellan Lutz (aka Emmett Cullen) at the TwiTour in LA !
You can
view the rest of the pictures over at Kellan Lutz Online!



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Lutz och Fancinelli på Twi-tour!



Check out the new pictures and video of Eclipse cast members Peter Facinelli (aka Carlisle Cullen) and Kellan Lutz (aka Emmett Cullen) at the TwiTour in LA !
You can
view the rest of the pictures over at Kellan Lutz Online!
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Robert Pattinsons vaxdocka är klar!!!

Crowds of screaming fans will flood Times Square to help unveil a wax figure os Hollywood heartthrob Robert Pattinson on Thursday, March 25 at 10:30 a.m. at Madame Tussauds New York, 234 West 42nd St. (b/w 7th & 8th Aves.), Manhattan. Madame Tussauds London will also unveil a figure of R.Pattz on the same day as Madame Tussauds New York.
Bilden är liten men vad tycker ni?
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Twilight-kläder :)

Skulle du vilja ha balklänningen Bella bar i Twilight?
eller kanske klänningen Alice har på Bella's födelsedagsfest?
eller varför inte Edwards varma grå jacka?

Cosplaysky förverkligar dina fantasier:




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Robert,who? oh yeah that guy that played in the Twilight-films!

Jah hur kommer det gå för Rob efter Twi-livet?

Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland remained queen of the box office, but Robert Pattinson’s romantic drama, Remember Me, raked in an underwhelming $3,300,000 on 2,215 screens during its second weekend — for a paltry total of $13,900,000. It was even more shocking that it came in at number 10 under the practically unheard of Our Family Wedding, which begs the question — why is one of the hottest male stars raking in forgettable box office numbers?
Granted, $13.9 million isn’t the end of the world since Emilie de Ravin’s tale about a rebellious young man who meets the love of his life after a family tragedy only had a budget of $16 million — but it certainly suggests that Robert Pattinson isn’t the draw for fans, but the character Edward Cullen is. Pattinson made a name for himself as Cedric Diggory in Harry Potter and he has sparkled in a few indie roles (
How to Be and as Salvador Dali in Little Ashes), but people fell in love with Edward Cullen while reading Stephanie Meyer’s books and then became enamored with Pattinson through the films.
Finally, legions of fangirls had their immortal boyfriend personified on screen and the spell seems near impossible to break. Pattinson’s young female fan base doesn’t really want to see him falling in love with anyone other than Bella and his character Tyler in Remember Me wasn’t the hopeless romantic clamoring for his lady love — in fact, previews for the film looked seriously depressing and far too dreary for the teen crowd that has come to adore him.
So, can Robert Pattinson have a successful career after the Twilight series ends? What’s the best way for him to transition from Edward to another character? Does he need to choose a completely different role or will that cause his fan base to abandon him entirely? Or is he destined to become this generation’s
Mark Hamill — for example, so linked to a single character that no one wants to risk casting him in anything besides movies featuring glittery vampires?

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All denna Robsession!


Girls strip off for him, fans mob his set, but the sweet little star of Twilight, and the world’s most wanted man, still struggles with his sex scenes!


Would I like to interview Robert Pattinson, the world’s hottest young actor? Yes, obviously — although getting close to the boy who plays the “devastatingly, inhumanly beautiful” vampire Edward Cullen in Twilight at first seems virtually impossible. Penned away in the Dorchester, like a rare Siberian tiger cub — he can’t stay at home in Barnes when he comes back from LA because the fans know where he lives — he is being firmly guarded by a brace of film execs when I arrive for the interview.
A spiky PR woman for his new film, Remember Me — a romantic drama memorable mainly for the fact that it has Pattinson in it and is not a Twilight film — loudly repeats instructions that there are to be “no personal questions”. A Spanish reporter returns from the interview room claiming that when she asked him if he liked cooking, she nearly got thrown out. Another, a Brazilian, reveals that, in fact, he did get thrown out of an interview with Pattinson’s Twilight co-star and rumoured girlfriend, Kristen Stewart, back in Sao Paulo, for asking about boyfriends. “Her bodyguard asked me to leave,” he shrieks. “I said nao! And then he tosched me on the shoulder, and I said, ‘Okay, I go.’”
I decide to dive in and ask him about Stewart. Does he believe in love at first sight? “Yes,” he says. Has he… ever been in love? “Ah, yes, I think so.” “What’s…” Nick looks up from his BlackBerry. “Let’s keep to the film,” he snaps. Pattinson looks embarrassed, but the moment has passed, and I am to leave. He gets up and gives me a kiss on the cheek: light and soft and not at all unfresh. I read somewhere one girl’s parents paid £20,000 in a charity auction for one of those.
“Like, who the ferque is this diva?” says someone else, and by the time I am ushered next door to meet him, I’m thinking the same. But as soon as I clap eyes on him, and take in that kittenish smile, the tousled, leonine eyebrows and — of course — the lush whip of unwashed hair, all that instantly vanishes. Pattinson is calm, polite and pleasant: heaven on a stick.
Swigging nonchalantly from a large bottle of Hildon like Stoli at a Facebook house party, he is also utterly oblivious to the commotion outside. And as for being a diva, well, let’s just say his agent, a jaded LA type who sits in the room with him, is far from impressed with his attempts so far, rolling his eyes when Pattinson asks: “Nick, am I a diva?” The actor furrows his brow. “I mean, I had a very diva-ish conversation with some people about some stuff in this film about a day ago…” Nick sighs and drawls: “He just said what he thought in a script meeting. Please don’t use that as an example.”
“But I was very… bold,” protests Pattinson. Of course, that is exactly what he isn’t, because ever since his first knicker-melting appearance in Twilight, Pattinson, 23, has become a byword for shy hotness. Formerly a public-school hoodie from southwest London with a bit part in Harry Potter, he now commands £8m a movie and is such a huge lust object that he is unable to go anywhere unattended. During the filming of Remember Me, “3,500 people turned up and went completely mental”, he says. He is constantly asked for kisses and autographs, and recently, when he joked that the best way to get his attention was to take your clothes off, to his horror one girl in the audience promptly did so. Does he find the attention irritating? He shrugs. “I guess it’s part of your reality,” he says, before admitting he’s a “little bit harder to deal with” now. “I get stressed out much quicker.”
Then again, being beautiful “is quite hard”, even though he insists that 50% of people don’t get his appeal: “They’re like, what’s that all about?” Certainly, today, he is trying his best not to be beautiful, in a greasy cap and sweats. Only his eyebrows seem manicured, although he insists they aren’t. He had them plucked on the first Twilight film, but “you get to the point where you think, ‘Okay, I look like a transvestite now’”. Not that the girls — Twilight’s obsessed fans are called Twi­harders, and a documentary, Robsessed, has been made about them — were put off.
Over the past 18 months, the actor has been linked to countless models and actresses, and recently appeared to confirm the rumours that he was dating Stewart, but then mysteriously claimed that he was “allergic to vagina”. Er, what was that about? Is he dating Stewart then? Or is he, in fact, gay? I heard his two older sisters used to dress him up and call him Claudia when he was a boy.
Actually, he’s “straight”, he says. He found the male-on-male sex scenes he had to perform in a film, Little Ashes, last year “strange. I played Salvador Dali. We were both straight, but he was Spanish, so much more confident about being naked and stuff, although when it comes down to it, it’s just as awkward with a girl, especially if you are straight and with a girl you don’t like… Anyway, Javier was really cool. After we had been pretending to have sex on this balcony in Barcelona, he was like, ‘We have such a strange job…’”
Poor Pattinson! Eyeing the bed in his suite, I dare a question about those sex scenes with girls. He famously had to pop a Valium to get through the audition for Twilight, in which he needed to make out on a bed with Stewart. For the love scenes in Remember Me, his co-star Emilie de Ravin “was very, very, very comfortable”, he sighs. “I’m always the one who’s the most uncomfortable. So we came into the room, and they said ‘It’s a closed set,’ blah, blah, and we got on to the bed and the director was like, ‘I got you these things, if just maybe you wanted to use them. You don’t have to use them, maybe it will make you more comfortable.’ They were these bondage things: lube and handcuffs and porn videos. It was so funny!
”And when you end up doing it, you have this little patch on your privates. I didn’t really tape it up properly, so I’d spent so long taping it round myself and then literally it falls off within one second and it’s taped to the sheet. And you realise the whole crew are looking directly at your butt crack.” He blanches. “I can’t think of anything exciting for them about this. It gives you a lot of respect for porn stars.”
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Michael Welch, Justin Chon och Christian Serraos på New Moon release party i Utah :)



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Dakota på Lopez Tonight :)





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4 miljoner sålda exemplar av The Twilight Saga: New Moon = DVDn gör succé i USA :D

Inte helt oväntat vava? :)

Los Angeles, CA March 23, 2010 – Summit Entertainment announced today that the home entertainment release of the studio’s action-packed, modern day vampire love story THE TWILIGHT SAGA: NEW MOON sold just over 4 million DVD units in its first weekend of release. The tally surpasses the first weekend sales of TWILIGHT in 2009 which sold 3.8 million DVD units, and went on to be the top selling DVD title of the year with 9.2 million units sold.

Läs mer på newmoonmovie.org.

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Bella, Edward och Jacob genom evolutionen i tre filmer :)


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