Posted by Ashlee 0 comments Filed under: Articles, Characters, Eclipse, Robert, Site, Videos, edward cullen

The Reelz Channel has given their scene-by-scene review of the newly released (and first official) Eclipse trailer that we all first saw this morning! They talk about everything from Bryce as Victoria, to that shiny thing on Bella’s finger -

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The Eclipse teaser trailer opens with a dark and brooding Summit logo, which ties in nicely with the official movie logo shown at the end. See the little eclipse peeping over the Summit mountain? That’s clever. And ominous.

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Fifteen seconds in, after a sweeping view of the Forks landscape, Bella and Edward appear lying in a beautiful meadow. Robert Pattinson’s Edward voiceover states “Isabella Swan, I promise to love you every moment, forever.” Cue swooning fangirls at the sound of his deep, velvety voice.

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Fade to a close-up of the lovebirds now standing in said meadow, holding onto each other as if the world is coming to an end. (Well, it is, isn’t it? Nasty vampires are on their way). Bella looks like she’s wearing a shiny silver engagement ring, and Edward’s Cullen Crest wristband is present. It’s like a new range of His ‘n’ Hers, Twilight style.

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Remember those badass vampires we mentioned? Well, here they are. Say hello to the Volturi — Italy’s finest.

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Volturi Jane wastes no time telling Bella and Edward exactly what thinks. “She’s still human. The Volturi don’t give second chances.” Isn’t that what Caius said in New Moon? I would have thought the Volturi were above repetition, seeing as they’re so frightening. And threatening. Quick, Edward — run away!

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They don’t run — that’s not the vampire way. Instead, they stand there looking pensive. With Edward’s funny, flat hair and uber-pale skin. Has Rob Pattinson’s self-styling ways rubbed off on his super-smooth alter-ego?

You can check out the rest of their review here!

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Posted by Tania 0 comments Filed under: Articles, Characters, Fans, News

The first official trailer for this summer’s The Twilight Saga: Eclipse debuted today (and is embedded at the end of this article), which means one thing: June 30 can’t come fast enough. After careful deliberation (read: re-watching the trailer over and over again), we’re more curious than ever to see genre director David Slade’s take on the teen vamp franchise.  Here’s why you should be, too.

Fans were spoiled with a bounty of sneak peeks at both Twilight and last year’s New Moon, but since Summit’s playing this one close to the chest we haven’t seen much of the David Slade-directed third film, Eclipse. Until now. What kind of new vision did Eclipse director Slade (Hard Candy, 30 Days of Night) bring to the franchise? Has he fixed any of the awkward elements of the first two films, i.e. vampire make-up and special effects? And what tone has he chosen for the third and arguably most exciting chapter in the Twilight Saga, a story filled with romantic entanglements, big choices for Bella, and the looming threat of not only Victoria, but the Volturi as well? All of those questions and more get answered below as we highlight the best parts of the first Eclipse trailer.

David Slade’s Naturalistic Cinematography

It’s been clear through Slade’s on-set Tweets that the man has an eye for gorgeous photography; that sensibility is evident in the way he’s chosen to film Eclipse, with naturalistic cinematography unlike both Catherine Hardwicke’s lo-fi Twilight and Chris Weitz’s crisp and polished New Moon. The landscapes we see in the trailer, all mountains and sparkling rivers and muted light peeking through the clouds, emphasize the setting of Eclipse’s big showdown (without a single glimpse of Victoria’s new hunting ground, Seattle) with location filming that looks fantastically authentic.

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First Look at the New Victoria in Action
No matter how you feel about Rachelle Lefevre’s departure from the Twilight franchise, you’re just going to have to get used to Bryce Dallas Howard’s new Victoria. So it’s a good thing that the trailer introduces her in a big way, by leaping across a river in one impressive effects shot. More importantly, it also shows how Slade’s vampire action might solve the weightlessness problem of Twilight’s wire work while feeling more realistic (i.e. not too CG heavy) than that in New Moon. (Then again, we don’t know how his fight action will look just yet.) (more…)

Posted by kim 0 comments Filed under: Articles, Characters, Movies, Remember Me, Robert

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“Remember Me” tells a sweet enough love story, and tries to invest it with profound meaning by linking it to a coincidence. It doesn’t work that way. People meet, maybe they fall in love, maybe they don’t, maybe they’re happy, maybe they’re sad. That’s life. If, let us say, a refrigerator falls out of a window and squishes one of them, that’s life, too, but it’s not a story many people want to see. We stand there looking at the blood seeping out from under the Kelvinator and ask with Peggy Lee, is that all there is?

You can’t exactly say the movie cheats. It brings the refrigerator onscreen in the first scene. It ties the action to a key date in Kelvinator history, one everybody knows even if that’s all they know about refrigerators. But come on. This isn’t the plot for a love story, it’s the plot for a Greek tragedy. It may be true, as King Lear tells us, that as flies to wanton boys are we to th’ gods. But we don’t want to think ourselves as flies, or see fly love stories. Bring on the eagles.

The fact is, “Remember Me” is a well-made movie. I cared about the characters. I felt for them. Liberate them from the plot’s destiny, which is an anvil around their necks, and you might have something.

(more…)

Posted by kim 1 comment Filed under: Characters, Eclipse, Movies

The first “Eclipse” trailer offers an interesting look at the direction the film is going to take. Sure, we’ve hypothesized a bit about what we thought could and should make its way into the first teaser, and we’ve got to admit that we’re a little bit let down.

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Maybe it’s because we already know the story of Bella Swan and Edward Cullen inside and out that it seems a little “uh-duh” when the trailer goes into an in depth explanation of how, still, Bella needs to make a decision whether to become a vampire or not. Less emphasis is placed on the love triangle between Edward, Bella and Jacob and more on the fact that each represents a different choice.

For starters, Bella wants to turn into a vampire so she can live the rest of her eternal days with Edward. But Edward doesn’t want Bella to become a vampire because he knows the repercussions of that decision and he loves her too much to let that happen. This idea is emphasized by shots of Bella with her dad and mom and the narration over the scene saying, “After a few decades, everyone you know will be dead.”

And then there’s Jacob to the rescue, saying, “You wouldn’t have to change for me, Bella.” He even challenges Edward with, “You have to consider the idea that I might be better for her than you are.” And it’s the truth: Jacob is the smarter choice for Bella, but he’s not the one she wants.

Then toss in some shots of the Volturi commenting that Bella was supposed to be a vampire by now, and our first shot of Bryce Dallas Howard in a horrendously curly red wig — almost bad at the one used on Kristen Stewart to cover up her Joan Jett ‘do. You’d think after the mishap that was Taylor Lautner’s wig in “New Moon” that Summit would have hired someone a bit better at wig-making this time around, but I guess not.

But the main problem with this trailer — the first trailer — is that it’s for the fans, not the general public. And yes while the “Twilight” fan base is enough to break records in the opening weekend of its release, it’s not enough to sustain the films to more than double that box office draw in the weeks after (yes, I am referencing “New Moon” here).

And “Eclipse” really does have the possibility of drawing in a wider audience. I have a feeling Summit is going to miss out on an opportunity to convince the rest of the film community that “The Twilight Saga” is more than just homage to the fans of the series, but they have already started out on a bad foot. Plus, even for the fans, there wasn’t enough to really go nuts over. A kiss maybe? Please? Pretty please?

Final Grade: C+

Source: MTV

Posted by angie 0 comments Filed under: Characters, Eclipse, Site, Videos, edward cullen

Watch Full Trailer Friday In Theaters Before Remember Me

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Posted by Tania 0 comments Filed under: Articles, Characters, Fans, Merchandise, Remember Me, Robert

Attention Twilight fans! You could bid to win Robert Pattinson’s Remember Me costumes when they go to auction this weekend.

That’s right, the actual clothes that have been worn by the man himself will be up for grabs, and YOU could be the lucky fan to take them home!

Well. If you have a fairly generous amount of money to bid, that is…

A series of costumes from Remember Me will hit live auction site icollector.com on Saturday, 13th March.

Items up for grabs include Rob’s blue Prada suit, Birkenstock shoes and white LNA t-shirt among other pieces worn on-screen.

The auction is all part of Premiere Pop’s Movie Prop Extravaganza – from which a portion of proceeds will go to the EIF (Entertainment Industry Foundation).

For more information, visit eifoundation.org

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Posted by Ashlee 0 comments Filed under: Articles, Characters, Movies, Remember Me, Robert

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From NZHerald

Twilight star Robert Pattinson proves he’s more than just every teenage girl’s favourite vampire with an intense performance in this smart and engaging romantic drama.

It’s a touching love story full of sentiment, reminding us to make the most of every day and to treasure those we love – a theme hammered home by a startling, unexpected ending.

It’s this twist for which Remember Me will mostly be talked about, regardless of whether you think it’s a breathtaking addition or a cheap ploy. Before this blindside, however, there’s an angst-filled young love affair to enjoy, largely thanks to the strong on-screen chemistry between Pattinson and Emilie de Ravin (Claire from Lost).

Read full review HERE

From Eye Weekly

For a film bent so surely on ascending its brooding star to the status of “actor,” Remember Me is surprisingly good. First-time screenwriter Will Fetters and TV director Allen Coulter have concocted a relatable family melodrama/teen-angst period piece (it’s set in New York City in 2001) that has a sense of humour about itself and packs a surprising twist.

Robert Pattinson demonstrates considerable depth as NYU student Tyler Hawkins, a nihilistic child of divorce trying to protect his younger sister from the terrors of her private school. After Tyler is hassled by a cop, his dweeby roommate encourages him to court the enforcer’s daughter, a classmate, as revenge. Star-crossed love ensues.

Read full review HERE

From Slant Magazine

Fetters tiptoes on little cat feet up to this pivotal moment in an attempt to impress the viewer with the painful sincerity of bad boy Robert Pattinson’s volatile ex-NYU student-cum-bohemian and his equally free-spirited girlfriend (Emilie de Ravin). During the ending, Fetters slams on the brakes frantically and, for no defensible reason, tries to turn the story into an epic tragedy for a modern (i.e. tween) audience. Never mind that this ending is crass beyond belief. The film’s star couple can’t even convince us that they’re really in love so what does it matter that the ending completely and totally shits the bed? (Look at the way they splash each other with water in his shower and wind up necking after they realize that they’re both all wet—now that’s what I call l’amour fou!) The climax is a glorious train wreck of an ending for a film that’s as inauthentic as it is egregiously clichéd. R.Patz haters will get a big kick out of seeing the crestfallen faces of fangirls as they trudge out of the movie theater not knowing what hit them.

Read full review HERE

From Twilight Lexicon

Overall if you are looking for a film that showcases Rob Pattinson as a knock-off version of Edward Cullen this is not it. The film is so much more than just a vehicle for Rob. The family dynamics and lack of direction that Tyler has are all things that average people can relate to. This is a story about survival, about being the one that was left behind and how you choose to live your life after being touched by tragedy. There is a heart and soul to this film that isn’t in your typical drama and it is absolutely worth the watch.
One last note bring tissues!!

Read full review HERE

From At The Movies – Australia

In REMEMBER ME, ROBERT PATTINSON plays an angry young man, Tyler, who blames his very rich father Charles – PIERCE BROSNAN – for the suicide of his older brother. When he gets into a fight one night he’s roughed up quite severely by a policeman, Neil – CHRIS COOPER. As revenge, his friend Aiden – TATE ELLINGTON – suggests he seduce Neil’s daughter Ally – EMILIE DE RAVIN – who is in their World Politics class at college…


Tyler and Ally fall in love and something good seems to come out of the relationship for Tyler. Charles likes Ally, and so do the rest of his family, including his younger sister Caroline – RUBY JERINS.

Read full review HERE

  

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Posted by Ashlee 0 comments Filed under: Articles, Characters, Movies, Remember Me, Robert

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“Remember Me” tells a sweet enough love story, and tries to invest it with profound meaning by linking it to a coincidence. It doesn’t work that way. People meet, maybe they fall in love, maybe they don’t, maybe they’re happy, maybe they’re sad. That’s life. If, let us say, a refrigerator falls out of a window and squishes one of them, that’s life, too, but it’s not a story many people want to see. We stand there looking at the blood seeping out from under the Kelvinator and ask with Peggy Lee, is that all there is?

You can’t exactly say the movie cheats. It brings the refrigerator onscreen in the first scene. It ties the action to a key date in Kelvinator history, one everybody knows even if that’s all they know about refrigerators. But come on. This isn’t the plot for a love story, it’s the plot for a Greek tragedy. It may be true, as King Lear tells us, that as flies to wanton boys are we to th’ gods. But we don’t want to think ourselves as flies, or see fly love stories. Bring on the eagles.

The fact is, “Remember Me” is a well-made movie. I cared about the characters. I felt for them. Liberate them from the plot’s destiny, which is an anvil around their necks, and you might have something.

The film opens on a New York subway platform. A young girl witnesses the senseless murder of her mother. We meet her again as a young woman. She is Ally Craig (Emilie de Ravin, from “Lost”), the daughter of a police sergeant (Chris Cooper). She’s in college. Having lost his wife, he is intensely protective of her.

We meet a feckless young man named Tyler Hawkins (Robert Pattinson). He slouches about trying to look like a dissipated Robert Pattinson. Drinks too much, smokes too much, has the official four-day stubble on his face, hair carefully messed up, bad attitude. He lives in a pigpen of an apartment with a roommate named Aidan (Tate Ellington), who might have been played by Oscar Levant back in the days when such roommates were obnoxious, OK, but bearable.

Tyler gets drunk one night, is thrown out of a club, gets in a fight, the cops are called, and when it’s almost all over, he shoves one of the cops — Sgt. Craig, of course. Young drunks: It is extremely unwise to shove the cop who is about to let you off with a warning. Tyler is thrown in the slammer. Not long after in school, the snaky Aidan tells Tyler that their pretty classmate Ally is the daughter of that very cop. He dares Tyler to ask her out and then dump her in revenge.

Aidan is a jerk, but logically Tyler is, too, because this set-up is morally reprehensible. However, to the surprise of no one in the audience, Tyler falls for Amy and neglects to break up with her. Their courtship is a sensitive, well-acted progression through stages of mutual trust and Tyler’s gradual rediscovery of his own real feelings.

There’s an intriguing subplot. Tyler’s parents are divorced. His father is the immensely wealthy Charles Hawkins (Pierce Brosnan), whose office looks larger than small airplane terminals. Diane, his mother (Lena Olin), has remarried. Tyler’s beloved kid sister Caroline (Ruby Jerins) lives with her. Only with Caroline can Tyler relax and drop the sullen facade, showing warmth and love. Until he meets Ally — and then there are two safe harbors, and his rebirth begins.

Pierce Brosnan plays a key role in the process. He has only a few significant scenes in the movie, but plays them so well that he convincingly takes a three-step character development and makes it into an emotional evolution. Meanwhile, Ally and Tyler encounter fierce opposition to their relationship from her dad, who can’t be blamed because as a cop, he saw Tyler at his drunken worst.

These people and their situation grow more involving as the movie moves along. Then there’s a perfect storm of coincidences to supply the closing scenes. That’s what I object to.

If we invest in a film’s characters, what happens to them should be intrinsically important to us. We don’t require emotional reinforcement to be brought in from outside. The movie tries to borrow profound meaning, but succeeds only in upstaging itself so overwhelmingly that its characters become irrelevant. I’m guessing the message is: Parents, when you have a rebel child who hates you, someday you will learn what a good person that child really was. It’s the dream of every tormented adolescent. Many of them become parents themselves and get their turn at being resented. Such is life.

Roger Ebert – Chicago Sun-Times

Via RMSaturday & Robert Pattinson Life

Posted by Tania 0 comments Filed under: Articles, Characters, Interviews, Robert

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Robert Pattinson is known for playing fearless vampire Edward Cullen in the “Twilight” series, but the British actor revealed that he wasn’t so tough as a kid.

“I got beaten up by a lot of people when I was younger,” he revealed in an interview with Parade magazine. “I was a bit of an idiot, but I always thought the assaults were unprovoked.

“It was after I first started acting and I liked to behave like an actor, or how I thought an actor was supposed to be, and that apparently provoked a lot of people into hitting me.”

Pattinson, 23, said he used his rough past to help play the role of restless Tyler Hawkins in his new movie, “Remember Me,” which hits theaters Friday.

“I related to Tyler in that I wish I could have done things like he did when I had the opportunity. There is something quite satisfying about being a little bit more reckless and even fighting,” RPattz explained. “It’s quite cathartic to just sort of randomly start hitting someone. It was fun kind of, letting all your rage go on the set.”

Much like his recent interview with Details magazine in which the actor griped that he’s “allergic to vaginas,” Pattinson continued to lament his female troubles to Parade.

“When it comes to the opposite sex, I’m not as fully confident as the guy I play,” said Pattinson, who recently revealed he’s dating his “Twilight” co-star Kristen Stewart.

“I don’t even remember the last time I asked someone out on a date, like, just went up to them and that’s the first thing I did. I’m much more self-conscious and not wanting to fail. So I tend to hold back.”

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Posted by kim 0 comments Filed under: Characters, Co-stars, Movies, Remember Me, Robert

rememberme-2Ladies, catch your breath – in between his time sparkling as a vampire, R Patz returns to the screen in this romantic drama.

He’s Tyler, a rebellious student in New York in 2001, who’s got a strained relationship with his lawyer dad (an aloof and emotionally hard Pierce Brosnan) ever since his brother committed suicide.

Tyler is a bit of a closed book drifter, a one night stands kind of guy who won’t emotionally open up – but that all changes when a twist of fate brings him to Ally (Lost’s Emilie de Ravin).

Ally too is emotionally damaged – having seen her mom murdered on the subway when she was 11, she isn’t initially too keen to let Tyler into her life.

But the pair’s paths are intertwined and fate has a way of playing these things out.

Both Pattinson and de Ravin are perfectly cast in Remember Me, an aching, yearning film about love – there’s broodiness aplenty and inevitable family dramas and a sprinkling of The Taming of The Shrew – but what Remember Me does have is a way of subverting your expectations.

Sure it’s a clichéd relationship – Ally’s dad, a cop (the ever wonderful Chris Cooper) isn’t impressed and Tyler’s dad is emotionally stunted from the rest of the family – but it’s the central performances from de Ravin and Pattinson which give this film flight and takes it away from your usual brooding young love and aching hearts kind of film.

Granted there are familiar familial patterns playing out here – the family drama on all sides is nothing new and there’s more than a few predictable moments as the end approaches.

Some will argue Pattinson’s just putting in another brooding performance a la Edward Cullen (ie slightly aloof) but that’s unfair to RPatz – whose restrained screen presence gradually unpeels and reveals several layers. It’s clear he’s destined for a shelf life beyond the ole vamp, and thanks to de Ravin’s emotionally rich performance, the pair sizzle on screen.

But it’s the rich ending of Remember Me which emotionally shocks you by knocking the wind out of your cinematic sails – it’s unexpected, powerful and may well leave you agog. (But you won’t find me discussing it here).

Remember Me is an intriguing relationship drama which will have RPatz’s fans both drooling and more in love with him than ever before – but its ending will polarise the audience; however sometimes, that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

Source via RPLife



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