Visualizzazione post con etichetta interviste. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta interviste. Mostra tutti i post

sabato 12 settembre 2015

EQUALS PROMO: Intervista con THR

In Drake Doremus’ future set love story Equals, all emotions have been suppressed, replaced by an intellectual curiosity that make for one very efficient workforce. Kristen Stewart and Nicholas Hoult play two people inflicted with SOS, Switched On Syndrome, that allows them to slowly begin to feel their feelings.
 

giovedì 25 giugno 2015

AMERICAN ULTRA: Intervista dal set con SlashFilm


AMERICAN ULTRA: Intervista dal set con HitFix


AMERICAN ULTRA: Intervista completa a Jesse e Kris

“What if Jason Bourne had been a stoner?” That’s the (absurd) question at the heart of American Ultra, the upcoming film starring Jesse Eisenberg (Batman V Superman) as Mike Howell, a typical stoner slacker convenience store clerk, who suddenly finds himself the target of a CIA op to erase highly-trained sleeper agents. Turns out Mike is one of those agents – a surprise to him, as much as anybody. When his girlfriend Phoebe (Kristen Stewart) gets caught up in the crossfire, Mike decides it’s time to push through the haze and save the day.
Last summer, Screen Rant was included in a handful of online journalists that were invited to the New Orleans set of American Ultra (a title that references the famous CIA “MKUltra” program). There, we got to dine and chat with director Nima Nourizadeh (Project X) and writer Max Landis (Chronicle), as well interviewing stars Jesse Eisenberg and Kristen Stewart, who play Mike Howell (a stoner who doesn’t know he’s actually a Bourne-style sleeper agent) and his stoner girlfriend, Phoebe. Both Eisenberg and Stewart shared what it was like to get this high-octane script from Chronicle writer Max Landis, what it’s like playing stoners, and being two unlikely candidates for a summer action movie.

AMERICAN ULTRA: Prime interviste dal set (ComingSoon, ScreenRant)

imagebam.com imagebam.com

lunedì 6 aprile 2015

SILS MARIA PROMO: Interviste scritte (Aprile)

THR:
"I've never, ever been like, 'One day, I'm gonna win an Oscar,'" Kristen Stewart told me on Friday when we met up on the campus of Santa Monica College. The 24-year-old, who has been acting since the age of nine, says her dreams have always centered on the work, not the reward. "Truly, my 'one day' was always, 'I'm gonna be a director! One day, I'm gonna direct movies!'"

mercoledì 11 febbraio 2015

BERLINALE: "LIFE" PressJunket (10/2) | Siti

Robert Pattinson, who is at the Berlin film festival with Anton Corbijn’s ‘Life’ explains why he can’t sit through premiere screenings and talks about his past, his future and his connection to ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ BERLIN, GERMANY (FEBRUARY 9, 2015) (REUTERS) – It was the morning after the night before for British actor Robert Pattinson as he attended a press junket on Tuesday (February 10) after he launched his new movie, Anton Corbijn’s ‘Life’ at the Berlin film festival. However, unlike the other people on the red carpet, Pattinson didn’t sit through the screening of the film.

martedì 9 dicembre 2014

STILL ALICE PROMO: Intervista con IndieWire

IndieWire:
Kristen Stewart has a come a long way since the "Twilight" franchise that launched her fame into the stratosphere. The hit series only wrapped two years ago, and already Stewart has distanced herself from the films that made her name by appearing in a number of smaller projects this year that prove her worth as an actress.
She kicked off 2014 by wowing in the Sundance Guantanamo Bay drama "Camp X-Ray," soon followed by Cannes where she held her own opposite Juliette Binoche in Olivier Assayas' latest "Clouds of Sils Maria." That project drew career-best raves for Stewart, and the goodwill continued when her latest film, "Still Alice," screened in Toronto where it was swiftly acquired by Sony Pictures Classics for distribution. In the devastating drama, Stewart plays Lydia, a struggling actress and daughter to a renowned linguistics professor (Julianne Moore) struggling with early onset Alzheimers. It's Moore's picture, but Stewart leaves a distinct mark as a young woman forced to cope with inevitable tragedy. The film was directed by partners Richard Glatzer and Wash Westmoreland. The former is living with ALS.
Indiewire spoke with the actress about her banner year.