Posts Tagged ‘Remember Me’
Being mobbed every time you leave the house is all in a day’s work for Robert Pattinson.
But for Tate Ellington, who played Robert Pattinson’s on-screen best friend in Remember Me, thousands of screaming fans following you down the street is one helluva terrifying experience.
OK.co.uk’s Nicola McCafferty spent an evening chatting with Tate, the self-effacing actor who starred as Aidan Hall, about what life is like for the Twilight hunk; how tricky it is working with him and how they escaped the hysteria…
What was it like working with Rob on Remember Me, did you guys strike up an instant rapport?
„Yeah I think so [I hope so]! I met Rob at the screen test and luckily I wasn’t too nervous that day as I was like I probably won’t get the job so…
„But when I got the job and I met him again, he was automatically as nice as can be and I had to make a point to be more talkative as I can be really shy, and Rob had a bit of shyness too.
„I was happy he wasn’t like this big jerk coming into the room and he was utterly always so humble and nice about everything.“
You played Rob’s best friend in the movie, did you guys spend time getting to know each other in preparation?
„After I got the job we had a couple of times where we would go to the hotel where he was staying and get to know each other.
„We sat around and had a beer and just chatted – it was good.
„I felt very comfortable with him from the get go. And I met Emilie de Ravin not long after, and automatically we were all jerking around!“
По принцип постваме фен арт-а вечер, но днес ще направим малко изключение, защото в мейла ни дойде най-красивото и нежно Remember Me видео, което сме виждали – на twinche1:
ally / tyler [remember me] || hurt
As we reach the half-way point of the year (where has the time gone?!) EF selects the top ten films of 2010 from January through to June. It’s been a surprising 6 months with some of the bigger, more anticipated blockbusters falling to the wayside as hidden gems rose to prominence. July through to December has a great selection of films to look forward to, kicking off this weekend with previews of The Twilight Saga: Eclipse. Other highlights include the Sylvester Stallone led all-star actioner The Expendables, Toy Story 3, The A-Team, The Sorcerer’s Apprentice, and of course Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Stayed tuned to EF for all of the latest gossip on these and many more movies.
Without further ado, here are the Top 10 films of 2010 so far…
No 10
It’s Complicated
No 9
Kick-Ass
No 8
Extract
No 7
Iron Man 2
No 6
Brooklyn’s Finest
No 5
Solomon Kane
No 4
Robin Hood
No 2
The Wolfman
No 1
Remember Me
Other than „Green Zone,“ several other new releases came to market last week, including Summit Entertainment’s „Remember Me,“ a romantic comedy with a $19 million theatrical gross that debuted at No. 4 on the sales chart
There is an elephant in the room, metaphorically. He is a most handsome, most famous, most perplexing elephant. His name is Robert Pattinson, a superstar among Twi-hards who follow his every breathless, bloodless moment in the Twilight series.
But „the room“ is an American indie film called Remember Me, beautifully crafted with an air of thoughtful melancholy by director Allen Coulter. This is the story of a New York university student estranged from his wealthy father, in trouble with cops, and intrigued by the daughter of one detective who has already smashed his face in during an alley fight. The film just debuted on DVD following its modest theatrical run, timed to coincide with Friday’s release of The Twilight Saga: Eclipse.
In Remember Me, Pattinson gets to play a real human being in a romantic drama populated by other functioning humans. They are flawed, complex, interesting people played by Pierce Brosnan, Chris Cooper, Lena Olin, wonderful child actress Ruby Jerins and Australian discovery Emile de Ravin as the object of Pattinson’s burning desire. No one drinks blood, although this saga is rife with tragedy.
Coulter, a New Yorker, is on the phone explaining how Pattinson, already cast in the first Twilight, was eager to find an antidote — something radically different — even before its release. Executives at Summit Entertainment, producers of Twilight, were looking to help out.
„Honestly,“ Coulter recalls of an early luncheon meeting with Pattinson, „he was not known, Twilight had not been released and there was no way to see it. We just knew he was interested. Sitting in front of us was a guy who was scruffy, intense, charming, unpretentious.“















