Scottish Daily Mail

Robert gets over his nerves with a disappeari­ng act

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Sometimes Robert Pattinson has to sit down, stop being anxious and recite: ‘ Just be yourself and accept you’re from Barnes.’

the actor knows the leafy district in south-West London well. it’s where he went to school, did a paper round and attended the local drama group, after which the Harry Potter and twilight franchises propelled him to a kind of stardom he disdains.

He can’t escape those movies, even though over the past few years he has done his strongest work in a string of what he terms ‘provocativ­e’ films. ‘i react quite strongly to people trying to put me in a box. i just want to try on a different persona.’

to prepare for the role of a delusional robber trying to break hi s brother (played by Benny safdie) from a guarded hospital room in the film Good time, the director Josh safdie had Pattinson roaming around New York trying to look like a loser.

they visited a city jail and Pattinson had his hair slicked back — and no one recognised him until he and safdie reached the girls’ correction­al section. ‘they were whooping “edward, edward,”’ safdie recalled, as he uttered the name of Pattinson’s character in the twilight series.

He

FARED better working in a car wash and he’d pop into a corner shop to purchase items in character. ‘i’d play around with words and you can tell instinctiv­ely whether people are buying what you’re saying. then i go away and work on making my characteri­sation more convincing.’

Pattinson likes to disappear in a role, but Good time is the real deal—a first-class disappeari­ng act where he’s unrecognis­able in a film that he totally dominates with a powerful, convincing performanc­e. it’s one of my top-ten performanc­es of the year.

Good time was shown in Cannes back in may, but Pattinson was terrified before he arrived there. He worried that a plot line involving an actress playing a schoolgirl who becomes involved with Connie, Pattinson’s character, would create problems.

‘at the time of doing the film it felt pretty scary, but the relationsh­ip between Connie and Crystal has been cut down andi remember thinkingi should make Connie rather asexual, which makes it OK, and id on’ t know whyiw as so worried,’ he told me.

He said that after years of acting he has only recently become comfortabl­e with it.

‘ event houghil ike doing i ti get so much anxiety about performanc­es. i try to calm myself and say, “Just be yourself and accept you’re from Barnes. Be real to yourself.”’

i told him to stop worrying and put all his anxiety and energy into his acting, which is what he has started to do.

He’s making a film with Claire denis called High Life. ‘it’s about a bunch of deathrow prisoners who get a chance to go into space and explore a black hole. it’s completely insane, which is fun.

‘We’re filming in Cologne and there are french and German crew and producers and there’s a lot of culture clash which i’m enjoying.’

it’s a pity that i don’t write reviews for the local paper in Barnes any more (i did about 100 years ago) because i would happily have told readers that their lad did good in Good time.

 ?? X E R : e r u t c i P ?? Grounded: Robert Pattinson reminds himself of his roots
X E R : e r u t c i P Grounded: Robert Pattinson reminds himself of his roots

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