"Twilight" actor Robert Pattinson hopes to shake-off his heartthrob rep with the new movie "Good Time"; Filmmaker Alejandro Iñárritu's virtual reality experience puts the viewer in the shoes of someone trying to make an illegal border crossing through the desert between Mexico and the U.S.; "Whose Streets?" documents how the shooting death of Michael Brown inspired grassroots activism in his community of Ferguson Missouri.
In 'Good Time,' Robert Pattinson transforms into a tough-talking bank robber from Queens
These days, Robert Pattinson tends to approach his job as an actor more like an A&R agent — scouting for new artists to work with. It's a great way to meet talented future colleagues like the directors of his new film "Good Time" — Josh and Benny Safdie.
"I want to be in my own lane," Pattinson said. "I love finding people when no one else knows their kind of true talent."
Though the Safdie brothers were already making a name for themselves in the New York indie film scene, Pattinson learned about them from their 2014 film "Heaven Knows What."
"Initially, I'd just seen a photograph. It was one still from their movie and I loved the still so much, and I met them afterward and I was just like, I just know," Pattinson said. "I know they've got an amazing energy. And their level of confidence and how they saw their career going, you could just tell."
In "Good Time," Pattinson stars as Constantine “Connie” Nikas, a small-town criminal who goes on a dangerous mission to get his mentally impaired brother out of jail after a bank robbery goes wrong. The cast includes one of the directors Benny Safdie as brother Nick Nikas, along with Barkhad Abdi and Jennifer Jason Leigh.
When Pattinson stopped by The Frame, he talked about what it was like working with the Safdies and transforming himself into the role of a bank robber from Queens.
Interview Highlights
On meeting the Safdies and the idea for "Good Time":
There wasn't even an idea. We just talked about it. And they were doing another movie, which they're going to do next, in the Diamond District. ... They didn't see me as being right for that, but then they kind of had these interests in "The Executioner's Song," the Norman Mailer book, and this other book called "In the Belly of the Beast." And some kind of thing in the kind of low-level criminal world.
And also basically in that first meeting, me and Josh just kind of realized we were both obsessed with this show "Cops." ... He basically described the movie as saying it's basically from the early seasons of "Cops" when there used to be just sort of four segments, four sequences, instead of like banging from thing to thing to thing. And just really, really expanding it. Or just finding one of those two-paragraph crime stories in the crime blotter and just really expanding it.
On working with real people for character study:
There were two guys. One who was ... a mechanic in Yonkers. ... His brother was very, very similar to the character of Connie. ... He dug a hole next to someone's house on a hill. And he lived in a hole. And the guy who had the mechanic gave him a bunch of car batteries and [he] had power in the hole.
The other guy... he was actually in the director's last movie. And I remember he played a drug dealer in the last movie and I loved his accent. And I just talked him a lot for the accent. And his body language and everything... I studied him. I didn't realize it was a character study. I just kind of... I was to get a Queens accent.
On working with the Safdie brothers:
I loved the Safdies' style in the previous movie ["Heaven Can Wait"]. I just loved how the performances were and I loved the seamlessness between the world of the movie and just the real world. They're shooting on really long lenses in the middle of the street. And I really wanted to do that. The last time I shot in New York, it was just like total theater. I did this movie called "Remember Me" and ... it was at the peak of "Twilight" stuff and there was one scene, there's like 3,500 people watching this scene. It's just ridiculous.
Also, every time I'd gone to New York there's paparazzi and stuff. And I just thought I'm not only going to ruin my performance, I'm going to ruin the movie if I let this happen. And so a lot of the preparation was basically thinking how I couldn't get recognized by one person, because as soon as you get recognized by one, it's done.
On working with actor and co-director Benny Safdie:
I actually learned a lot about disguise technique with ... Benny, who plays my brother Nick. We spent a few days just fully in character, which I've never really done before, and then going into a Dunkin' Donuts or whatever and just seeing how these characters play out. But Benny's a spectacular improviser, I'm not really.
I don't know anything about Queens as well. So I'd have to develop this character where, you know, if someone says they recognize you, it became part of the character saying like, You don't recognize me. And kind of being quite aggressive back to them and just kind of holding your face differently and a ton of different things.
On working with actor Buddy Duress, a former Rikers Island inmate:
I hung out with Buddy a lot. The ideas were based on-- he wrote some journals from prison and stuff and talked to Josh a lot about developing a story. And it is fascinating. I only know people who went to prison in England and it's very, very, very different. The whole mentality's completely different.
But I just remember... I remember talking to someone who is locked up, was a young bank robber, and I was just approaching it as actor. So it was like, What was he thinking? What's going on? Why did he want to do it? ... Why? What's the secret? And he's like, Well he wants money. [He] just wanted to get money.
And when you simplify a character where ... you take away so much of the fat around your decisions and it's like it's this weirdly spiritual thing when you just have one goal and that's it. There is nothing else to it. It's just that. I just want the money. I find that really, really deep in a strange sort of way.
On using a Queens accent for the role:
I've always just loved accents. ... When I first started acting, I think's that's one of the first things... if you find a voice... that it's not just from the area which you're from, there's a reason why people from that area speak in a certain way. It's to do with the whole mood, the whole body language, you can tell a lot from that.
It's like being able to read microexpressions. And as you're trying to shape your mouth into an accent ... it drags your whole body. You're like puppeteering the rest of your body with it. And yeah, it was very important. Especially on this. Especially because everyone in the movie is from Queens. [laughs] You can get called out very easily.
To hear John Horn's full interview with Robert Pattinson, click on the player above.
Virtual Reality exhibit lets viewers experience Mexican migrants’ harrowing journey
Oscar-winning director Alejandro Gonzalez Iñárritu, the filmmaker behind "The Revenant" and "Birdman," has created an interactive experience that puts the viewer literally in the footsteps of border-crossing immigrants.
The film — “Carne y Arena” (Flesh and Sand) — debuted at the Cannes Film Festival and is currently being presented at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Steven Cuevas of KQED’s The California Report took the virtual reality journey. Read more and listen to his story here.
'Whose Streets?': The story of the Ferguson uprising told by the people who lived it
From "Detroit" to "Confederate," the question about who gets to tell a story is a controversial one. But for the people whose stories are being told by someone else, it's an important one — and it's very much at the heart of the new documentary, "Whose Streets?".
After hearing about the shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown, Jr. on Aug. 9, 2014 by police, director
was compelled to find out the real story of how Brown's community in Ferguson, Missouri was responding. Folayan was in New York City at the time.
"[I] really never wanted to do it without the collaboration of someone from there, so I was always looking for a partner who's from the city," says Folayan, who was born and raised in South Los Angeles. "Damon's name constantly came up."
is an artist from St. Louis, Missouri who is co-director and producer of "Whose Streets?" "We met around September [2014]," said Davis of his first meeting of Sabaah and some members of the crew at a gallery. "I was helping organize more from an artistic point of view."
Folayan and Davis were determined to show the people of the community where Mike Brown lived and died from their own points of view. Their desire was to show what mainstream media was not showing on news reports. Their mission is stated on the film's website:
"Every day Americans experience a mediascape that humanizes whiteness, delving into the emotional lives of privileged white protagonists while portraying people of color as two-dimensional (and mostly negative) stereotypes. Nowhere was this more apparent than in the case of Mike Brown, who, in spite of being college bound & well regarded by his community, was portrayed as a "thug" and a "criminal." For this reason, it is essential that Black people be the ones to tell our own true stories."
When "Whose Streets?" premiered this year at the Sundance Film Festival, Folayan and Davis spoke with The Frame about how they put their film together and what they felt they'd achieved.
On using sourced footage from the community for the film:
FOLAYAN: We knew from the beginning that we were going to want to source footage from other places because we did come in a month after everything happened. And those first few weeks were really, really critical. But we underestimated the challenge ... that there was so much coverage, finding just the right pieces was extremely difficult.
DAVIS: It was people that we knew, that we made connections to. We were scavenging social media, YouTube.
FOLAYAN: You know, [taking] Vine videos and putting them together ... I have to give all credit to my editor, Christopher McNabb, who really, really took this massive undertaking and made meaning out of it, and made beauty out of it.
On telling the story from the POV of the Ferguson residents:
DAVIS: We wanted to make this a community — the community speaking — and for multiple reasons. Not to make one person a leader, so to speak. But like the community needs to speak. And that was something we were very, very adamant about from the very beginning.
FOLAYAN: This summer, I was saying we had a 90-minute cut that was totally character-based and, you know, [it] almost felt like it could be a film itself. But it didn't have that element of the movement and the social context. So we had to both strip it down and then add back on the whole other half of the movie.
On showing the black narrative in America through the story of Ferguson:
DAVIS: I think we captured the soul. Like if somebody's that's been there their entire lives, it feels like home. And somebody comes from a community much like mine and it looks like her home too. You know what I mean? It looks like we were able to do something simultaneously on a micro and a macro scale. By using one community to show how the black narrative in America looks.
FOLAYAN: That was the reason it felt so urgent. And I think it's the reason why so many people gathered around to support us, because it was painfully clear that the narrative was being skewed.
On why anyone could relate to this story:
DAVIS: We went out and we showed humanity. Our focus was the people who looked like us. And by doing that, if you're a human being, you can see yourself in these people. And I think that is something I haven't seen in a lot of movies. I don't really see myself like that, you know what I mean? So I think we did well.
To hear the full interview with Sabaah Folayan and Damon Davis, click on the player above. To get more content like this, subscribe to The Frame podcast.