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‘Harry Potter’ Smashes ‘Eclipse’ Record and Advances on ‘New Moon’

Posted July 15th, 2011 By: Evie 10 Comments »

The news outlets have been back and forth all week, with Fandango and IMAX eventually just issuing the latest numbers every half hour yesterday. Finally last night, Deadline reported that Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 not only beat The Twilight Saga: Eclipse for the midnight screenings record, but it pretty much smashed it. Will The Twilight Saga: New Moon hold on to it’s record for biggest single day ever, or will Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 finally be the one to smash that record? Right now it looks like Harry Potter is winning….

FRIDAY 8:30 AM, 4TH UPDATE:
Warner Bros said today that Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows – Part 2 grossed $43.5M last night from 3,800 North American locations helped by higher 3D ticket prices, shattering the previous midnight screenings record of $30M set by Twilight Saga: Eclipse which was only a 2D movie. IMAX set another record midnight of $2M for the 3D franchise finale helpe. The franchise finale also scored 97% positive on Rotten Tomatoes. “Records will fly out the window this weekend,” a studio exec is predicting. “All 3D theaters sold out to excellent reactions.” The global cume is now $$105.1M and counting…

THURSDAY 6:30 PM, 3RD UPDATE:
My sources have the latest box office numbers for Warner Bros’ Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows – Part 2. Domestically, $45 million has been collected already in pre-sales for this opening North America weekend, including $27M for tonight’s 3,000+ midnight screenings which could reach $40M alone. Internationally, $43.6 million has been added from the 24 of 59 countries where the franchise finale opened Wednesday. Another 19 nations debut the movie Thursday but that figure won’t be available until tomorrow. By Friday, the film will playing in an additional 16 territories as well as in 4,575 theaters in the U.S. and Canada. What these numbers mean is that Warner Bros is on track to break its own Dark Knight domestic opening 3-day weekend record of $158M. Helped by Harry Potter – Part 2′s higher 3D ticket prices, the new pic could reach $180M. “Midnights and Friday will be huge,” a rival studio exec tells me. “The only question will be how front-loaded they are and where they end up. A lot of the international openings Wednesday were records so the total foreign will be huge as well.”

Read the full story at Deadline here.

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Filed under: Eclipse, Movie, New Moon, News BlogTA Toolbar: Download Here

Chris Weitz Would Love to Work with the Cast of ‘New Moon’ Again

Posted June 23rd, 2011 By: Evie No Comments »

Just because New Moon is long since done and we’re already looking forward to Breaking Dawn, doesn’t mean director Chris Weitz is done with The Twilight Saga. When Ted Casablance from E! Online chatted with Chris just hours before the big premiere of his movie A Better Life, Chris admitted he’d love to work with the Twi cast again and feels they are very talented. Chris even went on to say that he’s looking forward to Breaking Dawn, especially that whole big birth scene. Read more below:

“Yeah. I really, really like those guys,” Chris gushed when asked if he’d work with the Twi gang again. “Some of them are coming to support me tonight, which is really great. And I think that they’re all terribly talented. It was part of the reason I did New Moon in the first place.”

The “some of them” he’s referring to are a fabulously casual K.Stew and hunky Taylor Lautner, who both supported their director pal’s latest flick, A Better Life, when it premiere at the L.A. Film Fest.

And all teasing aside, Chris is a good sport about the whole Twilight sitch and says he’s excited to peep Breaking Dawn when it hits the big screen. One scene in par-tick has made him a curious man:

“I wanna figure out how they shoot that part where the baby eats its way out of Kristen’s stomach!” Weitz said.

Read the full story at E! Online here.

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Exclusive: Chris Weitz Talks ‘A Better Life’ and ‘New Moon’

Posted June 22nd, 2011 By: Team Switzerland No Comments »

Yesterday we (along with some of our favorite Twilight fansites: Twilight Lexicon, Twilight Series Theories, Twilight Examiner, Twilight Moms, Twilightish, and Team Twilight) had the great opportunity to speak with New Moon director Chris Weitz, whose film A Better Life premiered yesterday at the LA Film Festival, and will also hit theaters (in a limited release) on Friday.

In the exclusive new interview, Chris discusses the emotion in A Better Life, the family parallels between Twilight and A Better Life, his recent Twitter popularity, and much more. Check out the interview in its entirety below!

Q: How were you able to get such amazing emotions out of the actors, especially [Jose Julian] – I just read on his page that he’s never done anything like this before. The movie’s so powerful; how did you get the actors to portray that on-screen?

Chris Weitz: Well, I mean Demian Bichir is a big actor in Mexico. He’s been in many movies; he’s incredibly technically accomplished and a brilliant actor so that was never in doubt for me. Of course, when you’re starting with a newcomer, you don’t really know what you’re going to get, but I think the thing that we managed to do was to schedule it so that the scenes which he was being a difficult teen and kind of a pain in the butt were early on, which is kind of easier for a sixteen-year-old actor to go to, and then the more emotional scenes, by the time we got around to shooting that, he had lived in our little circus for you know a couple of months. He had learned from Demian; he had learned how to focus; he had been through all this thinking about things, and so that helped him. And of course acting with Demian when he’s delivering that sort of final speech in the detention center, I would find it hard not to convey a hell of a lot of emotion myself.

Q: Twilight fans obviously, certainly we love our good-looking men and the abs, but we do like more than that, and one of the big themes in the Twilight series is family and relying upon your family. Can you speak to those similar themes in A Better Life?

Chris Weitz: Yeah, well that’s kind of why I started tweeting and why I thought it would . . . why I was really glad you all could see it early . . . because you know it’s not about vampires and werewolves and that sort of thing, but the great thing about Twilight, I think the revelation is that people will go see a movie that concerns itself with emotions, and that is very much about family. I mean, Carlos . . . like Charlie Swan is a great dad, he will always be there for his daughter. Carlos is a character who just keeps his head down and works hard to do everything that he can for his son, and he and his son are at odds because they don’t have the chance to be with eachother enough to understand one another, and, you know, part of the interest of the story is that it’s this terrible thing that has happened that allows them to learn more about one another. So, I mean, to me, it’s not so weird that we’re talking together about this. I mean, of course I want as many people as possible to see the movie, but I think that the great thing about the success of the Twilight films is that it’s not just going to be . . . it’s defined sort of the strength of movies about emotions in the marketplace. And that’s kinda what I do, so that’s something I’m very happy about.

Q: With New Moon, I know you were pretty specific about your intent to bring on only First Nation or Native American actors for the wolfpack, and I was wondering if with A Better Life, you required all the actors to be from Mexico or of Mexican descent.

Chris Weitz: Yeah, I did. The reason is that people would tell the difference. You know, for instance . . . there are a couple of reasons I didn’t go after someone like Javier Bardem. Javier Bardem is Spanish, and that’s from the Conquistador culture. Mexicans are from the culture that has been dominated. And also there’s a difference between a Mexican Latino-American and a Salvadoran Latino-American. Just ask them. And they recognize those differences, just in terms of the accents and everything. And we wanted this to be as authentic as possible, so for instance, with the three characters who are supposed to have been born and raised in Mexico, those are all actors who flew up from Mexico in order to . . . those are three big Mexican actors who flew up in order to play those parts. And we’re proud to do so because they were sort of representing the experience of Mexicans who come to this country. And just as I thought it was somehow, I don’t know, karma-cally appropriate to cast First Nation actors in New Moon, it was in this case as well.

Q: Could you talk about the differences in how you prepare for a film like New Moon or The Golden Compass, where the characters are more fantasy-based versus A Better Life, where they’re obviously real-life type characters?

Chris Weitz: I think it’s actually strangely similar. Because in something like New Moon or Golden Compass, if you don’t believe that the characters believe what they’re going through . . . if the characters aren’t acting in their own real lives, then something’s going to be missing on the screen. So, sort of the way I prepare with the actors or rehearse with the actors is exactly the same way. Because we’re just talking about what emotions each character is evoking in the other. The one thing I didn’t have to prepare actors for on this movie was to say, ‘Oh, by the way, ninety percent of the time, you’re going to be acting with this green pillow, which is not going to give you anything back.’ I remember having to go through that with Nicole Kidman, this whole session with the technicians, just showing her what she was going to have to do to act with this imaginary monkey, and I’m really glad not to have to do that again.

Q: How do you feel about your recent popularity on Twitter?

Chris Weitz: I don’t know, am I popular? I keep noticing that a lot of people have more followers than I do. I mean, I’m very touched by it actually. It’s really, really cool to sort of revive this relationship with the fans which had kind of gone dormant. I think there was probably a time where I was Twittering too much for my mental health. I would go on these massive binges, and then I realized, cause I’d always been sort of a bit snobby about Twitter, like ‘I would never do that’ . . . and then when I got my hands on the keyboard, you couldn’t stop me. I was in Twitter Jail twice a day. And now I’ve learned to just calm down a bit and to try to focus as much as possible, but it’s really cool however. I think it’s great to have like I think it’s 27,000 followers? It’s awesome. Sometimes I feel terrible that I can’t answer everybody’s questions, like no human being would be able to unless they had several clones, but it’s been a fun way to revive for me, the experience of that sort of enthusiasm.

Q: You worked with a lot of your New Moon alums on this one like Javier Aguirresarobe, Alexandre Desplat, and Peter Lambert . . . I was wondering what made you bring them back on board for A Better Life and how did working with them compare and contrast with the two?

Chris Weitz: Well, you know, one of the great things about getting older and making more and more films is that you start to develop these kind of continuous working relationships with people, and that’s ideal . . . if you get used to working with someone and feel a great degree of comfort with them you don’t have to start from scratch every single time, so you know, working with Javier I just knew how beautiful his work was going to be, and the same thing with Alexandre, you know, when you listen to the score he did for this picture, it is absolutely gorgeous, and especially under the conditions – which was that we had about a month between starting the score and recording it in London. And you can’t do that kind of thing if you’re working with somebody for the first time. We’re trying to make a film that looks much more expensive than it actually was, and, you know, even working with Peter, just the degree to which we were able to understand what we were trying to get from the get-go helps a tremendous amount, as well as the fact that like any job, you like to work with your buddies. You know, that’s kind of one of the great things about working on films.

Q: One of the things that I noticed when I saw the movie was that I was so impressed with the soundtrack. I’m bilingual, and I really really enjoyed the soundtrack. Can you talk a little about how you decided to pick those artists and songs; you know, was somebody translating for you, or did you just come . . . cause they are just a fantastic fit?

Chris Weitz: Well, eventually, now I’m able to understand the lyrics to the songs themselves because I was learning Spanish throughout the whole process and it’s been quite a while now. I’ve realized, people have very little patience for Mexican music because they don’t realize that it’s very much about the lyrics and about the particular sense of melancholy that infuses a lot of the older songs . . . we very clearly wanted to define different musical territory between Luis, the son, and his more sort of aggressive Spanish hiphop and the kind of music that Carlos would listen to, which is very much more lyrical and melancholy and loaded with sorrow, and there’s so much to say about the position of people who come to this country to work . . . and of course the real sting in the tail for me, for people who can speak Spanish, is the music that was playing in the nightclub when Carlos goes into it because it’s Narcocorrido, and it sounds like it’s this very happy-go-lucky mariachi music, but it’s actually music about drugs and killings and shooting and grenades, and it’s really kind of the equivalent of gangster rap. It’s really very strange and particular kind of music, but to me at that moment, Carlos is in hell, and that music was just right for us.

Q: What do you want people to take away from this movie?

Chris Weitz: More than anything, I want people to take away a sense of the universality of the love amongst families, between parents and children. I mean, it’s obvious that this bears on a very hot-button issue on immigration, but it’s not really an issue movie, we’re not trying to forward any kind of political agenda . . . just to open a window to people’s lives that they may not know about and the kind of parallel worlds that people live in, that they’re not aware of. Whether it be in Los Angeles or any city in America.

Q: Even in just the early reviews, there’s been a lot of awards buzz, especially for Demian . . . he’s been compared to Javier Bardem in his role for Biutiful . . . how do you feel about the awards buzz? Does it add pressure or does it feel good at this point?

Chris Weitz: Well, I mean, of course it’s really lovely. I don’t want to make any assumptions or to get a big head or to get too excited about things except to say that I think that the awards buzz for Demian is really well-deserved. I think it’s an extraordinary performance by an extraordinary actor, and if there was anyone who deserves to get recognized for this, it’s Demian. So yeah I see it as my job to get him nominated at this point.

Thanks to the lovely Amanda Bell for transcription, Summit for allowing the opportunity, and the always-fabulous Chris Weitz for taking part in this interview!

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Filed under: chris weitz, New Moon, News BlogTA Toolbar: Download Here

Chris Weitz Describes ‘New Moon’ Experience

Posted June 15th, 2011 By: Evie 1 Comment »

IndieWire has a great interview with the very talented Chris Weitz as he gears up for the world premiere of A Better Life on June 21st. Here Chris talks about his journey through his films and what it was like to film New Moon and bring it to life with all the CGI elements. Read more below:

When I turned in my director’s cut for “The Golden Compass,” the studio concluded that I was trying to turn a popcorn movie into the world’s most expensive art film; they fired my editor and took the cut from me.

“New Moon” was all about getting back on the horse for me and working with some very talented people – Kristen Stewart, Alexandre DesPlat, the great Spanish cinematographer Javier Aguirresarobe. I wanted to make a lush widescreen romance out of a ‘tweener phenomenon and I knew the audience would come. I would say, “They’re expecting a cheeseburger, but I’m going to give them foie gras.”

Such is the naiveté of late-early-middle age. The restaurant critics were not supportive. Nonetheless, I was able to compose hybrid real-action and CGI sequences on a grand scale, create sheer cliffs and raging seas from pixels, and transform people into horse-sized wolves at the side of the legendary Phil Tippett.

We built it and they came. Our release day remains the biggest day in box-office history, a testimony to the wizardry of Summit’s marketing department more than anything else. Now, with the kung-fu of CGI at my disposal and a big old blockbuster puffing wind into my sails, it was time to find the biggest movie, with the biggest robots, the muscliest superheroes, the starriest stars…

…Except it wasn’t. My brain was shot. My home was distant. My family was unfamiliar. I had been inducted into the high mysteries of CG, but the secret inside the box was a little scrap of paper that read, “You are now making two movies at a time, not one.” I grumbled about quitting. Then, when no one tried to stop me, I returned my thoughts to a script that was then called “The Gardener.”

Read the full interview at IndieWire here.

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Filed under: chris weitz, Movie, New Moon, News BlogTA Toolbar: Download Here

A History of the MTV Movie Awards’ Love Affair with ‘Twilight’

Posted June 4th, 2011 By: Evie 1 Comment »

PopSugar has a cute look at the history of The Twilight Saga at the MTV Movie Awards, in honor of tomorrow’s big day with the new MTV Movie Awards and all of Eclipse’s nominations. Check out more below:

It seems like every year the Twilight series and its cast run away with the night’s honors at the MTV Movie Awards, and we’ll be watching to see if they do it again this weekend. In anticipation of the big show, let’s take a look back at some of the most memorable Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart, and Taylor Lautner moments from the past awards — including Robert and Kristen’s recurring will-they-or-won’t-they-kiss routine! Then, check back with us on Sunday, as we’ll be broadcasting live from the red carpet!

See more at PopSugar here.

Are you excited for tomorrow’s MTV Movie Awards?

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Dancer Melanie Auditions for ‘So You Think You Can Dance’ with ‘The Meadow’ from ‘New Moon’

Posted May 28th, 2011 By: Evie 4 Comments »

‘So You Think You Can Dance is back, and in the this year’s auditions, we got to hear a little piece of New Moon. Dancer Melanie has quite successfully used the soundtrack of ‘The Meadow’ by Alexandre Desplat from the soundtrack of The Twilight Saga: New Moon to move on to a real spot on the show. Check out her beautiful dance below:

(Thanks Noor!)

This girl is an incredible dancer! Between the music and the dance, I was completely spellbound from start to finish. I can’t believe the way Melanie could move, she is absolutely amazing and the music just fit her dance so well. Be sure to let us know if you ever catch any music from The Twilight Saga soundtracks being used on any television show, and send in where you saw it to newsblog@twilightersanonymous.com!

What did you think of this dance? Did you catch this episode of ‘So You Think You Can Dance’?

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Filed under: Music, New Moon, News Blog, SoundtrackTA Toolbar: Download Here

How Does the New ‘Breaking Dawn’ Poster Rank With Past ‘Twilight’ Teasers?

Posted May 25th, 2011 By: Evie 7 Comments »

We’ve finally received a new teaser poster for Breaking Dawn Part One and now MTV wants to know just how you feel about the new poster and how you think it compares to past teaser poster for Twilight, New Moon and Eclipse. Check it all out below:

Breaking Dawn Part One teaser poster

2008: “Twilight”

The poster that started it all! Robert Pattinson’s pale, chiseled profile hovers in the blackness above Kristen Stewart, who looks like a baby, OMG. Those cheeks! So young! Adorbs!

2009: “New Moon”

Nothing could ever come between Bella and Edward… except Taylor Lautner’s butt! Which, of course, he presents to the audience as he makes himself a sandwich out of the would-be lovers—keeping the two safely apart and giving us a world-class back view to boot.

2010: “Eclipse”

Oh movie, how you tease us. Instead of showing us the actors we’ve come to know and love, this poster introduced the whole “floating words over weather phenomenon” trend with the movie’s title interposed over…wait for it… an eclipse.

Tell us which one you like and then go check out more at MTV here.

Which poster do you think was the best teaser for the movie? Which do you just like best?

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