Robert Pattinson: Before Twilight I never got the good-looking parts
Twilight star Robert Pattinson talks to Metro about life as one of the world's hottest heart-throbs plus working with Reese Witherspoon in his latest film Water For Elephants.
What do you miss about Britain now you live in LA?
I  miss the light in London, which is different to anywhere, and also the  smell of the city. I miss getting pints in pubs. I miss the newspapers –  I still prefer English newspapers to US ones – I miss reading the sport  section. I miss the football… Arsenal.
How do you deal with fame?
Actually,  I was thinking the other day that no one ever rings me up. No one ever  asks me to do anything, so it’s kind of easy. And I’m working all the  time anyway. But when I’m not working, I’m still one of those people who  calls up every name in his entire phonebook to say: ‘Hey, what you  doing? Are you doing anything tonight? Can I come with you?’
What was it like starring opposite Reese Witherspoon in epic love story Water For Elephants?
You  actually played her son in Vanity Fair a few years ago. That was my  first ever job. I was 16 and she was the same then as she is now:  lovely. At that time, I didn’t know what I was doing. I got the job by  accident. It was nice working with her this time. I’ve met her a couple  times through the years and she’s always great. She has an aura of good  energy that she puts out to everyone.
How did you land the role in Water For Elephants?
Francis  Lawrence, the director, said he wanted to have a meeting and he took me  out to the elephant sanctuary where Tai [who plays Rosie the elephant]  lives and I saw her doing a handstand and stayed there for about four  hours playing catch with her. I would literally throw a ball and she  would catch it in her trunk and throw it back to me, and I was like:  ‘OK, even if this movie is the worst movie ever made, I get to work with  this elephant for three or four months. I’m definitely doing it.’
Have you always been an animal lover?
Yes  I think I have more of an affinity with animals than I do with people. I  had a dog for 18 years called Patty and she was great, and I just got  another dog a couple of days ago in Louisiana, a rescue dog, from a  shelter. He was going to get put down. For some reason, I was feeling in  a very sensitive mood and I decided I needed a dog. He’s a kind of mix  of everything. He looks like a hyena. He’s a cool little thing and  really relaxing to have around.
What kind of roles are you drawn to?
I  like to go between people who have absolutely no morals and those with  very black and white moral stances. But then I get really attracted to  the other side: people who want to burn the whole world down.
What is it like being adored by girls around the world?
I  don’t really think about it. It is nice but you hope it’s something to  do with you rather than people’s imaginations. The only thing you can do  if someone likes your films or likes you is try to be good, which  people hopefully appreciate. You hope people like you for who you are  rather than what they imagine and how they perceive you to be. Before  Twilight, I never got the good-looking guy parts. It’s funny when the  world suddenly turns and you’re viewed in a different way.
Have you had much time off and what do you do when you’re not working?       
I’ve been working seven days a week. I don’t do anything. I  don’t relax. I look forward to plane journeys, that’s how bad it is, and  then I can fall asleep. I play this game on the iPhone called FallDown!  It’s the most ridiculous thing and it involves absolutely no effort of  your brain whatsoever. You just have this little ball and roll it down,  and I can literally sit there and play it for 16 hours. But then I just  sit there and get more frustrated.

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