Rob pattinson where is he from




















Pattinson told Ellen DeGeneres during his first appearance on her show that he doesn't really know how to drive. Plus I don't know how to use the little wipey thing on the windscreen, so I can't actually see. No other pairing has won two years in a row, let alone four.

Nearly a decade after the first "Twilight" film was released, Pattinson told Howard Stern in that he was almost fired from the role. According to the star, he was acting "too serious" as Edward and was told to lighten up. He was even given a copy of Stephanie Meyer's "Twilight" with every mention of his character smiling highlighted for inspiration. Pattinson told MTV in , that on the first day of filming "Twilight" he almost tore his glute during a fight scene.

I was at my peak, my physical prime, and then The a-- is out! Pattinson told Today in that he doesn't understand "nickname culture" and thinks his own, R-Patz, "sounds like an antacid tablet. Russian astronomer, Timur Kryachko, discovered an asteroid in and named it after Pattinson, reportedly because his wife suggested it.

I didn't sign for Disney. There's not a stipulation which forces me to smile to the paparazzi. Sometimes I think, 'to hell with acting,' and then I realize I could be working at a shoe shop. Acting is much cooler. Make it all stretch. I don't mind waiting. Make it stretch for 70 years. When I was 14, I fronted a rap trio. Pretty hard-core for three private school kids from suburban London. And my mum's, like, cramping our style, popping her head in to ask, 'You boys want a sandwich?

I remember I didn't know how to scratch and so I used to pull up and down the zipper on my hoodie and recorded it. People just project their idea of my character Edward Cullen on to me and they just seem to assume that I'm the same, when, in reality, I'm not.

I mean, just last year I couldn't even get a date and then this year, the world turns and it's so bizarre that everybody just changes their mind. I never considered myself attractive, really. I was always kind of gangly in school.

You get into acting to do movies and nothing else. I've never been interested in trying to sell my personal life. And that's really the only reason why people are bringing it [personal questions] up.

The one thing that pisses me off about working in films is when you start a project and then, suddenly, two days before you start, there's a massive rewrite to make an R-rated movie into something that's PG, and it's a totally different story. As soon as that line's been crossed, you know you're not making a movie anymore. You're making a But with people like Cronenberg you know that, no matter what, there will be a movie at the end, and it will be solid and self-contained, and it's not made for any other reason than it being a movie.

I was a bit of a loner at school. My first kiss was when I was 12, but I didn't have a girlfriend until I was The girls said they'd been to the local acting school. I never did any acting at school - I was quite shy - but after that day my dad nagged me about attending. He said he'd pay me, which is pretty strange, but I went. And I like being slightly on the fringe as well,rather than trying to get movies that are sort of vehicles.

I can't really tell what's so interesting about actors. People don't find the personal lives of people with much more power than any celebrity would have, interesting.

And I think if you put the lives of people who control billions of dollars on the front pages of every single paper, the world would be a better place. If you took away publicists and things and people spoke for themselves, then they have to be responsible for their own words. I like movies more than acting, and I like the idea of being in movies that I like so at least you're sort of contributing something.

I think as soon as you feel validated, you're a bad actor. You should feel like every single job is a potential which you're never going to get one again. He's one of those guys who would be like an ax murderer.

As I get older, I just get more and more and more self-conscious about getting photographed. I don't know why. I've done it too many times and now I feel like everyone can see through me. I've never worked so hard for an audition. I really, really fought for it. But once I got the job, I've never felt more free in a part. There were no constraints to it at all.

I always find sex scenes are the most random thing to see in a movie. Two actors pretending to have sex. It's so stupid. I literally can't do it. It's just me looking uncomfortable, trying to put on an American accent I get so nervous, like cripplingly nervous. I'm just bad at them and get tremendous anxiety and feel awful afterwards. You can never tell how someone's going to report something and how anyone else around you is going to react, because they didn't ask to be talked about.

I can take responsibility for stuff I say about myself, but it's the same way I don't like people talking about me. We were a little sick of looking at each other. Pattinson thought: cooking. He had notions of Top Chef, of us photographing our respective refrigerators and then battling it out. Neither of us has really seen Top Chef. And he will always answer: hahahaha.

Last year, he says, he had a business idea. I was trying to figure out how to capitalize in this area of the market, and I was trying to think: How do you make a pasta which you can hold in your hand? He says he went so far as to design a prototype that involved the use of a panini press, and then, he says, he went even further, setting up a meeting with Los Angeles restaurant royalty Lele Massimini, the cofounder of Sugarfish and the Santa Monica pasta restaurant Uovo.

Let alone acknowledge what my plan was. There was absolutely no sign of anything from him, literally. And so it kind of put me off a little bit. Nevertheless, Pattinson says, he conceived of a brand name for his product, a soft little moniker that kind of summed up what he thought his pasta creation looked like: Piccolini Cuscino.

Little Pillow. One 1 giant, filthy, dust-covered box of cornflakes. One 1 incredibly large novelty lighter. He puts on latex gloves. He pulls out some sugar and some aluminum foil and makes a bed, a kind of hollowed-out sphere, with the foil. He holds up a box of penne pasta that he had in the house. I watch as he pours dry penne into a cereal bowl, covers it with water, and places it in the microwave for eight minutes. He says using penne is already new territory for him.

It looks like a sort of messy…like, the hair bun on a girl. Nevertheless, penne and water in the microwave for eight minutes. In the meantime, he takes the foil and he begins dumping sugar on top of it. Then he adds sauce, which is red. The microwave dings, and Pattinson promptly burns himself on the bowl of pasta. He sighs, heavily, looking at it. At this point, his spirits have visibly begun to flag. Absolutely none. The little pillow now mostly built, he pours more sugar on top of it and then produces the top half of a bun, which he hollows out, places it on top of the rest of whatever the hell this thing is, and…begins burning the top of the bun with the giant novelty lighter.

At this point, he accidentally ignites one of his latex gloves, which promptly melts onto his palm. He yells in pain. Then he gingerly holds up the finished product: some approximation of a P, followed by a C, for Piccolini Cuscino, burned into the top of a hamburger bun. He starts wrapping the whole thing up with more aluminum foil, and then compacts it, and then wraps it some more, and then squeezes it again.

I say yes, you can, but what you absolutely cannot do is put foil in a microwave. He assures me it is not. He puts the aluminum sphere, the little pillow, into what he thinks is an oven and I think is a microwave.

He attempts to turn it on. He fumbles at some more buttons. In the silence, Pattinson and I both stare at the mysterious piece of machinery built into the wall behind him. Pattinson: Who else have you talked to? Have you talked to, uh, Claire Denis or any of those other people? GQ: Yeah, I was actually going to ask you who else I should call.

In the end, the hard work and the original choice to go with Pattinson paid off. The film also served as a reminder that Pattinson, a guitar and keyboard player who loves Van Morrison, retained his music aspirations, as the Twilight soundtrack includes two songs by the actor.

Between filming the Twilight series' later films, Pattinson worked on such notable films as 's Remember Me and 's Water for Elephants , alongside Reese Witherspoon. In , Pattinson landed one of his most challenging roles yet, playing young billionaire Eric Packer in the drama Cosmopolis , which met with early success from audiences and critics alike.

While the heartthrob buzz subsided somewhat after Twilight ran its course, Pattinson continued to ply his craft in critically acclaimed films. He starred alongside Guy Pierce in the Australian dystopian drama The Rover , and followed with a role as a limo driver in Cronenberg's Maps of the Stars Pattinson then landed another supporting role as explorer Henry Costin in the biographical adventure The Lost City of Z , before starring as a bank robber in the indie crime drama Good Time Continuing to seek out smaller, character-driven projects, Pattinson in co-starred in the western comedy Damsel , with Mia Wasikowska, and the sci-fi feature High Life , with Binoche.

The following year he joined Willem Dafoe for the well-regarded psychological horror flick The Lighthouse , and enjoyed a prominent role in The King , based on the historical works of William Shakespeare. On May 31, , it was confirmed that Pattinson had been selected to star as the new Caped Crusader in The Batman , scheduled for a June release. We strive for accuracy and fairness.

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