Tag Archive for 'Vampire-Werewolf-Girl Romance'

How to Watch: “Twilight: Eclipse”

Step 1: Accept the best. For the Twihard fans, Eclipse should thrill and excite to no end; for the rest of the world, it stands as the best of the three in the saga.

Step 2: Don’t have to be a Twihard. Now I wouldn’t call myself a Twihard, since I haven’t read all the books or have posters of Edward and Bella all over my room, BUT I did enjoy the first two movies, despite all the criticism. Look, I might be a 40-ish mother of two, but there is no way I’ve forgotten what it’s like to be a teenager again. All those raw emotions. And I am NOT alone. Women of all ages — and men, who are in touch with their romantic side — go gaga over the tortured romance of it all. Granted, both Twilight and New Moon are over-the-top melodramas of the highest order , but I think that’s why they are so popular (and better told onscreen than read in the books, in my opinion).

Step 3: Watch the vampire-werewolf-human triangle even out. Bella (Kristen Stewart) and Edward (Robert Pattinson) are finally allowed to be blissfully in love. In fact, old-school Edward, who comes from a time when getting married meant “I love you,” wants to wed the lovely Bella, even though she repeatedly declines. She just wants him to turn her into a vampire, so they can go loving each other happily ever after — and after and after and after. Edward wants to keep her pure, on all levels, and postpones the inevitable in hopes Bella might change her mind and want to stay human. Um, yeah, that’s not happening.

Step 4: Observe a small, well maybe not so small, obstacle in their way to the hereafter: Jacob (Taylor Lautner). He understands Bella has a major thing for the vamp but by god, he’s going to make her realize she should be with him, a hot-blooded human who just happens to turn into a werewolf to chase down bad-ass vampires every once in awhile. You can cut the sexual tension between Bella and Jacob with a knife, but ultimately, Bella stands by her choice. And speaking of bad-ass vampires, Victoria (Bryce Dallas Howard) still wants Bella’s head on a plate and creates an army of “newborn” vampires to come after Bella. It seems these bloodsuckers are more powerful in their new state than any other time as a vampire, so, the Cullens are riled up for a fight and ask their sworn enemies, the Wolf Pack, to help them out since the Cullens are going to need all the assistance they can get.

Step 5: Be like Harry. The Twilight Saga is a little like the Harry Potters in that they keep getting better with each new director. David Slade has had some experience with vampires, having helmed the horrifying 30 Days of Night, and you can definitely see his darker touches in Eclipse. The newborn vampires are downright scary, ripping it up in their new form and tearing through humans like paper. As are the menacing Volturi faction, lead by the pain inflicter Jane (Dakota Fanning), sent to the Pacific Northwest to “deal” with this new problem. And there’s a lot more action, believable action, which should please some of those husbands and boyfriends dragged to the theater by their respective mates.

Step 6: Remember, Eclipse is ultimately about the three main characters — Bella, Edward and Jacob — who have now become fully fleshed out by the actors who play them, and Slade does a really nice job making  Stewart, Pattinson and Lautner look even more appealing than they already do, especially Stewart, who has much more of a spark in this installment. It could also be because Bella is becoming a stronger character, more sure of what she wants and more determined to get it. At one point, she tells Edward she is afraid he won’t love her as much once she becomes a vampire, to which he reassures her, “You’ll always be my Bella… just less fragile.” I’m sort of looking forward to that moment but will have to wait for the last two Breaking Dawn movies!

How to Get a NEW “Eclipse”

Here’s a new and improved trailer for “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse” — a vampire battle is imminent:

How to “Eclipse” Yourself

HERE IT IS!! The trailer for The Twilight Saga: Eclipse. Whatever will Bella do? Who will she pick? I’m goosepimply with anticipation:

How to Defend “New Moon”

new-moon-movie-photos-1.0.0.0x0.450x338I’d rather step away from the critic’s circle this time, if you don’t mind. I’m fairly certain none of the millions of fans of the Twilight movies could give a rat’s ass what a jaded film critic thinks about it. And so, I’m not going to be one.

Instead, I’m going to stand up for the films, particularly New Moon. Look, I might be a 40-ish mother of two, but there is no way I’ve forgotten what it’s like to be a teenager again. All those raw emotions. And I am NOT alone. Women of all ages – and men, who are in touch with their romantic side – go gaga over the tortured romance of it all. Granted, both Twilight and New Moon are over-the-top melodramas of the highest order , but I think that’s why they are so popular (and better told onscreen than read in the books, in my opinion). In the first film, Bella finds who – we women can all admit – is almost the most ideal boyfriend: Edward is handsome, mysterious, aloof, but then once in love, completely dedicated and protective. He talks to Bella, listens to her, holds her hand. It isn’t about sex because, well, he’s a vampire and he might hurt her. One of the sexier love scenes EVER on film is when she wants to kiss him, in her room, but he tells her not to move. Man, Robert Pattinson slayed me.

Then, the saga continues. Just when you think it’ll all be perfect, in New Moon said perfect boyfriend rips out his beloved’s heart (just literally, not figuratively) by leaving her. It’s all in the guise of protecting her, but Bella is crushed, almost beyond repair. Like Kristen Stewart said in her press conference, “I know what’s it like to get broken up with, but I don’t know what it’s like to get broken up with by a vampire, who I’ve now been physically and chemically altered by. Suddenly, you take an addict, you take whatever they’re addicted to away from them, and there’s withdrawal.” That’s exactly how Stewart plays it. You totally feel her pain, like you were 16 again and you break up with YOUR first love.

-New-Moon-stills-HQ-twilight-movie-7408086-2000-1330But then there’s Jacob, Bella’s friend, who is there to help her pick up the pieces. He was, at first, a sort of puppy dog in Twilight, pining after Bella, but when she sees him again in New Moon, he’s suddenly a strapping young man, who clearly has the hots for her, and is transforming into something as equally as powerful as a vampire. As if Bella didn’t already think the world was a strange enough place with vampires, she is now also faced with the fact that werewolves, the vampires’ mortal enemies, also exist. Taylor Lautner truly stepped up with this one, not only physically but in his performance. And I love the fact the wolf pack are guys from a Native American tribe who have been dormant until the vampire Cullen family arrives. It’s a clever bit of storytelling.

So, here’s Jacob – a sweet, hunky, warm-blooded werewolf – and Edward – swoon-worthy, tortured, cold-blooded vampire — who are both in love with the same mortal girl. I mean, COME ON! How perfect is that love triangle? It’s AWESOME, is what it is. So, I don’t mind the cheesy dialogue. I don’t care whether the films should appeal to the male demographic with more “action” scenes. And I certainly don’t feel ashamed about ogling the shirtless eye candy; in fact, it’s refreshing to see men objectified for a change. All I want is to see how this will all turn out onscreen, because Bella has got some TOUGH choices ahead.

How to Interview: The Girls of “New Moon”

bella-Jacob-and-Edward-New-Moon-Wallpaper-twilight-series-7430198-1920-1200I feel SO sorry for Kristen Stewart, to be caught in a love triangle between buffed Taylor Lautner and swoon-worthy Robert Pattinson. Must have been difficult to drag herself to the set. Actually, one journalist during the press conference asked her if the slate were wiped clean, would Bella have gone for Jacob instead of Edward since Jacob is just too damn fine, to which Stewart replied, “I know, trust me. I feel you completely.” I’m sure she does; whether Stewart and Pattinson have the hots for each other in real life or not, you can’t deny Lautner’s appeal as Jacob. Personally, if I were Bella, I might go for Jacob just in looks alone – I like dark-haired guys – but once Edward kissed me, I’d buckle. If I were Bella, that is. Let’s just say, it looks like he knows what he is doing.

But I digress (apparently into my own personal la-la land in which I’M the star of the movie. What is WRONG with me?) Here’s what the girls have to say about their continuing Twilight experiences (and by the way, those Cullen babes have way too much fun):

Step 1: Did we mention how fine Taylor Lautner is as Jacob?
Kristen Stewart: “He becomes a man. There’s an entire [thing]. It’s not just a physical transformation. He really becomes an adult. I mean, I always knew that Taylor could do that but we just needed to make sure because it was so important. So once he actually proved himself, which wasn’t hard to do, even seeing him walk around on set was like a different experience. He’s literally become a different person. He’s just grown up. He’s so confident and the nicest guy that I’ve ever met. I know that I’m using this grammatically incorrect, but he’s the funnest guy I’ve ever hung out with. So he’s great. I’m so proud of him.”

New-Moon-bella-swan-8620748-650-433Melissa Rosenberg [Screenwriter]: “I wish I could take credit for the moments of Jacob pulling off his shirt and Edward pulling off his shirt. They are in the book and it seemed unwise to leave them out.”

Step 2: Enjoy being part of the Twilight saga
Stewart: “I think my favorite thing about this is the fact that I can keep it personal. It’s still something that if the saga didn’t become a franchise, and it was literally was just a series of movies that I had done, they would mean just as much to me. That’s also the best part of it, the fact that it isn’t like that, the fact that so many people are affected by it and are invested in it just as much as me if not more. Like I said about [director] Chris [Weitz], if you don’t like people and if you don’t want to make movies because you care about people then you probably are just wanting to be just rich and famous. So the fact that this is so important to so many people makes me so happy. That’s it. I think that’s it.”

Ashley Greene [who plays Alice Cullen]: “I think this go-around we were all a little bit more prepared, which was nice. In the first film, we were kind of all going, ‘What’s going on? What’s happening?’ And you know we had the support of the fans behind us. In the first one, again, we were going, ‘Oh, God, we hope they don’t hate us.’ And they completely embraced us, so going into the second one, I think it was a much more fun, relaxed experience, at least for me.”

Rosenberg: “… the objective is you have to take the audience on the same emotional journey they had in the book. That’s the primary objective and, in order to take them on that journey, there’s certain plot points you have to hit. You have to have, obviously, Edward breaking up with Bella. You have to Bella discover the wolves. You have to have Edward attempting to kill himself – all the things that are crucial in the book. So you start with those scenes and then you condense and expand on some things.”

new-moon-bella-bye-nowStep 3: Breaking up is indeed hard to do, especially if you’re Bella and Edward
Stewart: “That was the scariest thing. I was almost as worried about messing it up than I was about what I actually should have been thinking about which was the issues that Bella is dealing with. Reading it, it’s so iconic. I know what’s it like to get broken up with, but I don’t know what it’s like to get broken up with by a vampire who I’ve now been physically and chemically altered by. Suddenly, you take an addict, you take whatever they’re addicted to away from them and there’s withdrawal. So that was the most intimidating scene in the entire movie. I don’t know how to explain how I did it. Chris really helped me out. I mean, the breakup scene [itself], that’s not where I was intimidated. That was still, like she doesn’t even believe it yet. It’s when he goes, the absence of him, that I was scared of. I was like, ‘How am I going to be by myself in the woods with a hundred guys standing around me, filming me, die?’ Basically, literally having the equivalent of like a death scene but stay alive and get up and keep walking. It was hard. I still don’t know. I’ve seen the movie. I really like the movie, but I don’t know if anyone ever really would’ve been able to bring that to life the way that Stephenie [Meyer] writes it.”

Robert Pattinson [on his take of the breakup scene]: “There’s something weird about it. One of the main things I felt doing that and what really helped was people’s anticipation of the movie, and the fans of the series’ idea about what Bella and Edward’s relationship is and what it represents to them. It’s some kind of ideal for a relationship. And so, just playing a scene where you’re breaking up the ideal relationship, I felt a lot of the weight behind that. Also, it took away a fear of melodrama. It felt seismic, even when we were doing it. It was very much like the stepping out into the sunlight scene, at the end. You could really feel the audience watching, as you’re doing it. It was a strange one to do.”

Step 4: To be immortal or not to be immortal, that is the question
Stewart: “I can only relate to that as Bella can because she is still human. I think that’s an interesting question for any one of the vampires because they actually [deal with that]. The way that I consider immortality from both my perspective as Kristen and my perspective as Bella is that it’s so completely unknown but that given the right motivating factor I’d be willing to explore it. She’s very willing to acknowledge that she doesn’t know but that she’s willing to give it a chance because of Edward, because she’s willing to sacrifice anything for him basically. A big thing for Bella is change. She’s so terrified of change because she’s been thrust into this world. It’s not a necessarily healthy way of looking at things … Immortality is almost more scary in our story than mortality. To live forever seems on the surface like a really cool thing, but in our story it’s terrifying and means taking your soul – or at least it does to Edward. Like the lines of personal belief and literally theology and your faith, what you think is going to happen after you die, these are things that we think about incessantly in the movie and things that Edward and Bella even argue about. I know that was really everywhere but there you go.”

New-Moon-Meet-the-Volturi-twilight-series-7890430-403-599Step 5: Tap into your own eeeevilness
Dakota Fanning [who plays Volturi member Jane]: “I think the highlight of playing Jane was getting to wear that costume and to have the red contact lenses — I was really excited about that – and getting to play an evil character.

Michael Sheen [who plays Volturi leader Aro]: “We had to tone Dakota down. She was too evil. Her natural personality is too evil and we had to tone the volume down on the evil.”

Fanning: [Laughs] “Yeah. It was fun to get to play a feared character, you know, something different than what I’ve done before. And also, she uses her power not for good, which was another thing that was kind of interesting to me.”

Step 6: Remember those crazy Twihard fans again
Stewart: “The funniest thing in the world just happened to me in Brazil. I’ve had a lot of really varying experiences. Some absolutely touching and overwhelming and daunting. Some just like crazy. Then sometimes they’re really funny. I was in Brazil with Taylor, and Rob was in Japan. That’s just how it goes sometimes. We’re sent all over. This guy was chasing after us. There was a huge crowd anyway, but this one very persistent fella was like, ‘Where is Robert!? Where is Robert?!’ I couldn’t stop laughing and I felt really bad because he was distraught and emotional, and I was like, ‘It’s just Robert.’ It was really funny.”

Step 7: Remember your own crazy obsessions
Fanning: “I’m obsessed with baby names, with what people name their children. Just like friends, anybody. I know a lot of people’s baby names. [Laughs] But I just love names in general. I’ve been planning my children’s names since I was like four. I have lists of girls, boys, and I have them from all different ages. It’s really fun.”

Nikki Reed [who plays Rosalie Hale]: “I loved the Spice Girls. No, I’m serious. When I was 11, my brother told me if we took a bus, we would find the Spice Girls. And this is a true story. In Culver City. And we got on the bus with a suitcase, my brother and I, who was a year older than I, and we took the bus all the way down to the beach. And the Spice Girls weren’t there. But he was watching the news or something and it said they were on some highway and he thought he could put it together. My mom found us. That didn’t work out.”

Greene: “I just pretended to be a Spice Girl in high school. Or not high school, middle school. Oh, God.”

Kellan Lutz [who plays Emmet Cullen]: “I’m just obsessed with candy and animals. I love safaris now; I can’t go to a zoo. When I was in Africa I went to a safari and giant white lions and tigers were walking right by our place. Baboons just, you know, trying to break in our car and steal my candy, which isn’t nice. But no, I’m a huge animal advocate. And I just love animals.”

Elizabeth Reaser [who plays Esme Cullen]: “I don’t know, I’m currently obsessed with Jay-Z [laughs] If that makes sense. That’s all I can listen to.”

new_moon_cullens_posterStep 8: What the Cullens do at night
Greene: “Alice plans parties. Alice plans lots of parties.”
Reed: “I look at myself all night.” [lots of laughter among them]
Reaser: “I think Esme goes out and like tears apart a mountain lion every other night.”
Reed: “We hunt together. We don’t speak. We hunt.”
Reaser: “Yeah, like we don’t have all this chitchat. Like I think Alice and I hang out and we maybe go shopping and do all this girly stuff. This one and I, we just hunt.”

Step 9: Hug a Cullen babe, if you dare
Reed: “Seriously, the scenes that we’re in, like, they’re lacking warmth. I mean, for obvious reasons, but it’s nice when you see like the wolf pack come in because it’s needed. You need it. They wrestle around like a bunch of kids and you want that. It doesn’t feel natural like to watch all of us [Cullens]. Just know that it is intentional and we’re not retards. Like the fact that we don’t touch in the scenes and we’re all like we don’t touch ourselves. I mean, we’ve got white makeup from here to here [indicating arm from elbow to fingertips]. It’s a skill on its own to learn how to function in our hair and makeup and also knowing that we’re like cold stones. You know what I mean? I just want a hug all the time.”

Step 10: Tell us more about the third installment, Eclipse
Stewart: “Yeah, Eclipse … Just as soon as you think you’re going to get the same story, it’s sort all of a sudden completely changes. Bella is much more back to herself. She’s content now. She’s comfortable and self-assured in a way that she wasn’t in New Moon. I think what I really love about Eclipse, what was interesting for me to explore, was different levels of love and acknowledging that the ideals that you maybe had a little while ago aren’t true. Bella is innately honest. That’s something that I feel she is. In Eclipse, she lies to herself and she lies to everyone around her about the fact that she’s in love with Jacob, just not as much. It’s not that extra thing that you can’t really even describe. I loved watching the three of them. I loved playing with the three characters together. There’s literally a scene where Edward and Jacob who are mortal enemies are in a tent with a sleeping Bella in between them. It’s a ridiculous circumstance to find yourself in. We had so much to work with. Then the FX as well were even more. There’s a big battle that happens and that was more than we had to deal with on New Moon. So it was cool. I’ve always gotten to do things for really short periods of time. To follow a character this long surprises me every time. I can’t wait to do the fourth one because I’m sure that I’m going to come in and say that everything I said this time was wrong, that I actually know Bella more now. And actually we have such established dynamics. The way that I know Bella deals with Edward, you sort of can’t mess with that. I know how she deals with him. I know how she deals with Jacob. I know how she deals with Charlie, her dad, and to have people come in and help that process out is only cooler. You always get a different perspective. So working with David [Slade] was like, ‘Okay, lets see what you’ve got,’ because he came up with a lot of stuff that I would’ve never thought of, and he’s quite good at the whole technical aspect of movie making, which is so completely over my head. So I got to feel safe that he had that handled and me and Rob and Taylor just sort of did our thing.”

kristen-as-joan-jett1Step 11: Go from playing Bella to rocker Joan Jett
Stewart: “… I got to know Joan not only as her now, but I feel like through footage and just through the script and the story, everything, I feel like I got to know who she was in such a whole way. I was really concerned about details being right, gestures and stuff. I really wanted to do a good impersonation, but I also didn’t want it to be imitation. I wanted it to be natural. Playing Joan Jett had nothing to do with Bella. It was a small period of time that I had to do it, but it was an opportunity that I jumped on. I would’ve liked more time [between movies], but like I said about walking on set, seeing all the characters and Rob and Taylor, it’s instantly easy to get right back into the right mindset. That’s vague but I what I do is so vague. Literally, what I do is so oddly ambiguous.”

How to Interview: The Boys of “New Moon”

new-moon-movie-poster-sWithout going into it in great detail, the two Twilight movies have so far tapped into my inner-squeally 15-year-old pretty succinctly. For a few hours, it’s a great place to be. New Moon focuses on the growing friendship and affection between Bella (Kristen Stewart) and Jacob (Taylor Lautner), after Edward (Robert Pattinson) mysteriously leaves Bella, as well as the realization that Jacob is turning into a werewolf, ready to run with his fellow Native American wolf pack. Yes, there is a lot of shirtless-ness and rock-hard abs, which isn’t a bad thing at all.

Even though I had to sit through four hours of press conferences with the New Moon folks – from the three leads, to the Cullen family, to the Volturi to the wolf pack, to director Chris Weitz – it was worth it just to see all the hunky men parade through the ballroom. So, without further ado, here’s what the boys had to say [the girls will get their turn tomorrow]:

Step 1: Team Jacob or Team Edward?
Chris Weitz: “Making Jacob too appealing… It’s a balance, isn’t it, in terms of how he’s written and how Edward’s written, and how they’re shot. I think that for the diehard Twilight fans, nothing will ever beat Edward and so you’ve got this kind of very strong, simple fact that they know that he is the one, which allows you to push as hard as you possibly can and make Jacob as winning as Taylor has been able to be.  Which gives me a lot of latitude. We didn’t have to suddenly have a scene in which Jacob acted like a creep so that we’re reminded that we needed to love Edward. It’s just a love-fest.”

Taylor Lautner: “Honestly, I think it depends on what kind of girl you are, what kind of guy you like. Edward and Jacob are complete opposite guys. They’re hot and cold, literally. I personally love Jacob and Bella’s relationship, how they begin as best friends and it starts to grow into something more and more. Both guys are in love with Bella, both guys are always going to be there for Bella and they’re protective. I just think it’s what kind of guy you like.”

Robert Pattinson: “It was weird because I hardly did any scenes with Taylor. We just did the scenes at the beginning and the scenes at the end, and he had his entire storyline develop without me being around, which is interesting because I had no idea where his performance was going. It wasn’t really a competition or anything. It was independent. Whereas, in Eclipse, we did scenes together, all the time, with Bella. It really shows the dynamic in that film.”

new-moon-movie-photos-1.0.0.0x0.450x338Step 2: This isn’t just for girls … well, at least Robert Pattinson doesn’t think so
Pattinson: “It’s weird. I keep getting told by people, ‘Pump up all the stuff about the action, so the guys will go and see it,’ but it’s ridiculous. It’s like saying that guys can’t appreciate romance. I don’t think you can say that about Gone with the Wind. I’ve watched Titanic and I didn’t think, ‘Oh, this is a girl’s film.’  Especially in New Moon, and actually in the whole series, I’ve never played it thinking, ‘Oh, I’m in a series of girls’ films and I’m doing something just for girls.’ I don’t feel like I’m doing an animated Tiger Beat every week. I like doing romantic scenes. I felt like a lot of the storyline in New Moon is very heartbreaking and true. I didn’t think I was doing something, just for the sake of romance. I thought, in a lot of ways, that it was a really sad story.”

Weitz: “I think that there’s this wonderful audience that appreciates what we do, wants us to do well, and really wants to engage in an emotional experience. And so to me it made sense to be unashamed of the emotionality of the piece. And there’s werewolves fighting each other, vampires fighting each other, vampires fighting werewolves, and all sorts of great stuff for boys as well, but the girls needed to be given their due. And we, I think, deliver.”

Step 3: Focus on the role, Taylor, and it will be yours
Weitz: “I’d say there was a big possibility [Lautner wouldn't get the role of Jacob], but I was always convinced that he was going to be able to do it. The doubts came up because he had very few scenes in the first movie. Also because he’s described as being 6’5″ in the second book, some reasonable facts that we had to come to grip with. But I like the sort of sweetness of this character in the first movie, and I knew that it was easier to take an actor in the direction of anger and rage than it was to find someone who is kind of a hunk or 6’5″ Native American and somehow turn him into that very sweet-natured persona that Taylor brings out so well.”

Lautner: “Honestly, I knew where my character went in New Moon and that’s all I tried to stay focused on. I couldn’t control the things outside, I couldn’t control the media, but I could control what I was doing to portray Jacob Black correctly, and that’s what I stayed focused on the entire time.”

-New-Moon-stills-HQ-twilight-movie-7408086-2000-1330Step 4: Then rip those shirts OFF, especially when Bella’s head is bleeding
Lautner: [laughs] “I start laughing every time I see that scene. ‘Oh, you’re bleeding? Let me fix that …’ Here’s the thing: There’s a reason [Jacob] is not wearing many clothes in the movie. 1) When he transforms, his clothes get shredded, he can’t help it. And when he goes into the woods to put something one so he’s not naked, it’s a ripped pair of jean shorts. 2) He’s also hot, he’s 108 degrees, so that’s another reason. I love this character, this story and putting on the weight and not wearing much clothing was required for the role. In a year’s time, if I love a story and a character that required me to lose 40 pounds, I’m ready to do it.”

Weitz: “I like to say it’s all essentially economics. You see, the Quileutes [the Native American tribe in the film] don’t have very high average income and they can’t afford the T-shirts they would need, given the amount of times they turn into wolves on short notice and their clothes burst. So, really, they’d have to go to Wal-Mart every 10 minutes. They just go around in shorts for that reason.”

Step 5: Join a werewolf boot camp to get those six-pack abs
Chaske Spencer [who plays Sam, the leader of the wolf pack]:  “It was an hour of training, they got us a trainer. We went in, it was a guy who helped out on 300. It was a lot of circuit training and muscle confusion. We also ate a lot. We ate six meals a day, three protein shakes a day.”

Lautner: “I was in the gym about five days a week because it was important to get your recovery time. And not overworking yourself. I was trying to put on and if I was in the gym too much, I would be burning the calories I was trying to take in. The most important thing was the eating side. Everyone thinks it’s the gym but that was the easy part for me; I was motivated. But the eating was pretty hard. We found out I needed to eat at least 3,200 calories a day just to maintain, but I needed to gain and not just maintain, so I had to eat more than that, putting something in my mouth every two hours. And I’m busy, going downtown L.A. for meetings, so there wasn’t any time for me to eat. So I’d carry around a baggie full of meat patties, raw almonds, sweet potatoes. It’s not like every two hours I was eating ice cream. It was difficult.”

Pattinson: “I didn’t see Taylor until just a little bit before we started shooting, so when he came back, I had the same reaction as everybody else. I was like, ‘Now I have to go to the gym.’”

new_moon_wolfpack_photoAlex Meraz [who plays wolf pack member Paul]:  “It was definitely crucial to the bonding, too. That’s really what helped out with building the chemistry on set and even during filming, I think it really helped out a lot. We had a blast. We supported each other, we even made fun of each other – you know, like who could do the most push-ups or whatever. It really helped out with our characterizations.”

Spencer: “We helped [Jacob] phase. He doesn’t want to become a werewolf. No one wants this. It just happens, this is what we’re dealt.  When the Cullens came around, that’s when we started phasing.   My character, he was the first one to phase, so my relationship to these guys – I’m sort of the big brother, the mentor, the father figure to help them.  We are like a band of brothers, like a rock band, and suddenly Jacob starts to phase, and he has some choices to make and he has to join us.  We surround him and tell him it’s not that bad.”

Lautner: “It was a lot fun. Did you talk to them already? Oh boy, that must have been a fun room. They are great guys, and they each fit their characters perfectly. We had lots of fun on set, they made it exciting.”

Step 6: Throw down between Edward and Jacob, who would win?
Pattinson: “I don’t know. I think it’s actually a fact that Edward would win, if I read the books correctly. So, I guess I can hold onto that, for my ego.”

Lautner: “We were actually discussing this on set, like who WOULD win? Because there’s a scene outside Bella’s house in which Edward grabs Jacob’s shoulder, he’s mad and Jacob doesn’t take that, rips his arm off. At that moment, Jacob would transform into a wolf, but we’re having this discussion and get really deep, ‘If I were to poof into a wolf right now, what would happen? Who would win?’ Our discussion points were like, usually I’m with my pack so if I’m without my pack, am I going to be weaker? That discussion is still up in the air. You could probably get Stephanie Meyer on the line and ask her.”

Step 7: Throw down between Rob and Taylor, who would win?
Pattinson: “I did hear, the other day, that Taylor had agreed to an interview where the interviewer was going to fight him. I don’t think I’d ever agree to that. And, after looking at Taylor’s martial arts videos from when he was like nine, I wouldn’t really want to do anything. Maybe if I had some kind of weapon.”

Lautner: “I don’t know about Rob. He actually does a lot of boxing in his time off, so it could be a good match.”

Step 8: Appreciate how TORTURED Edward is
Pattinson: “When I read New Moon, it gave me ideas about how to play him in the first film. It’s the one I connected to the most, and the one that humanized Edward for me the most, as well. In the first one, he still does remain, from beginning to end, an idealistic character. But, in the second one, he makes a mistake that’s acknowledged by everybody, including himself. Also, he is totally undermined by more powerful creatures, and he’s undermined emotionally by people as well. That’s what humanized it. Since I read that book, I always liked him as a character, and I’ve tried to play that same feeling throughout the films. He’s the hero of the story that just refuses to accept that he’s the hero, and I think that’s kind of admirable.”

new_moon_michael_sheen_aro_volturiStep 9: Understand that vampires definitely dress better
Michael Sheen [who plays Aro, head of the Volturi, the vampire government and who also played the werewolf Lucian in the Underworld series]: “The tailoring is so much better as a vampire. I’ve been observing vampires for some time now and I finally got to give my own fang, although we don’t have fangs, do we? But no, it was great to be on the other side for a bit … I lose days just with my Lucian figure and my Aro action-figure fighting. They have their tea parties together. They like to fight and then they come back. I’m losing jobs because of it.”

Step 10: Be part of the Twihard fan machine
Pattinson: “Recently, I have less direct interaction with people because there’s way more security and stuff on set. But I always find it funny when older people come up. There was a woman who came up to me the other day who must have been in her 90s. It’s very unusual. And, they say exactly the same things as 12-year-old girls. That is kind of bizarre.”

Sheen: “I haven’t really experienced much of the Twilight fan stuff yet. But I did go into a store in L.A. to buy a pair of jeans and I went into the little cubicle to try my jeans on. It’s always a quite nerve-wracking time when I come out of the cubicle to look in the mirror anyway and I like that to be a private moment. As I came out, there was a woman shaking, going ‘You’re Aro, aren’t you?!’ and I just hid in my cubicle again. Whooo! That’s been really my only experience with that. Apart from also going into my daughter’s bedroom — she’s just got pictures from Twilight and New Moon everywhere — and seeing my own little picture, which I think she did out of pity. Have Dad up there as well.”

Lautner: “I don’t think there is any way to prepare yourself for this phenomenon. None of us expected it. When we were filming Twilight, we didn’t expect anything. We were just making a movie we wanted the fans to enjoy. And then it kind of blew into this whole other world. You can definitely say I felt a little bit of the pressure to bring Jacob’s character and Jacob and Bella’s relationship alive for the fans. This movie builds that relationship and sets up the love triangle, so it’s a very important story.”

robert_pattinson3Step 11: Just say the craziest thing you can think of about these Twilight stars
Lautner: “Honestly, I try and stay away from what’s been written about me because if you let that stuff get to you, that’s not true, it can drive you crazy. One thing that I have heard recently, which is NOT true, that I didn’t say, was that I’d never take off my shirt for a movie again. I didn’t say that. If I have to, if the character requires it, I will. Who knows in 10 years, I’ll do it. Like I said, if a character requires me to lose 40 pounds, I’ll do it. That was interesting to see.”

Pattinson: “Recently, some magazine had on the cover that I was pregnant. I was just like, ‘Wow!’ And, it was without a hint of irony or anything. I didn’t really know what to make of that one. I don’t even know if that qualifies as libelous because they can just say, ‘Well, it’s obviously fiction,’ but it’s written in a non-fiction magazine. I saw a couple comments under the article saying, ‘That’s why he always wears jackets. He always wears layers to hide it.’”

Step 12: Gives us a glimpse on the next Twilight movie, Eclipse
Lautner:Eclipse was my favorite book, so I was really excited about filming the movie. I just love that it’s the height of the love triangle. Twilight develops Edward and Bella’s relationship; New Moon develops Jacob and Bella’s relationship, and in Eclipse, the three of them are PHYSICALLY together. It has one my favorite scenes in that movie – the tent scene, where Edward is forced, and I guess it was a choice of his, to let me to sleep in the same sleeping bag as Bella just so she doesn’t die because she’s shivering to death. And I’m warm and the only thing that can keep her alive at that moment. It’s a funny scene, there’s a lot of ribbing going on between Edward and Jacob. It’s going to be a really good movie, and visually stunning, [director] David Slade is incredible visually.”