Melissa Rosenberg Breaking Dawn 2 Interview Lexicon Exclusive part 2

We brought you part 1 yesterday you can read it here.

So, given this, of all these directors, who would you most like to collaborate on a future project with?

Certainly Bill, but I’d love to work with any one of them.  They all have very different strengths.  I actually asked Chris to work on a project with me but he turned me down.  I’d work with David in a heartbeat. There are projects I have that I’d totally bring to David.

Would you ever tackle writing for such an iconic book series again?

Absolutely. If I only ever did series adaptations I’d be happy.  To me you spend all this time building a world and rich characters and to just have that be over in one two hour film. It’s such a huge undertaking. If they are interesting enough, if the world is interesting enough, I want to see what happens next!  For Twilight Stephenie handed me this incredible map. I mean what a gift.  With those characters, that mythology, that journey just as a reader I kept think well what’s next?

I’m actually doing another adaptation for Paramount, Earthsea.  I want those characters to be interesting enough and to build it. It’s a responsibility when you adapt.

 If you could pick any Twilight character and write a sequel or spin-off for, who would you pick?

That’s a tough call. You’ve got Garrett and Kate, that could be quite fun.

But I think Leah. He’s probably the most unfinished character of the series.  She’s very unhappy and she lends herself to wondering how does her life work out. At the end of Breaking Dawn she’s happier, but not totally happy. 

Then again there’s also Jacob and Renesmee, that is just starting out as well. That could be good too.

I love the name of your production company, Tall Girl Prods. I’m 5’8” and I love that you’re proudly wearing 3 inch heels right now.  And I know that you are being recognized as a female writer at the Bold Ink Awards next week. Can you tell me what’s next on the Horizon for you?

 We just decided to house ourselves over at ABC. It’s been such a great time working on a midseason replacement series called Red Widow with them. It’s based on a Dutch series.  It stars Radha Mitchell and Goran Visnjich  and a very large ensemble cast. It’s about this woman who grew up in the Russian mob, and when her husband is assassinated she has to delve into the criminal world herself in order to protect her children.  It’s another strong, flawed, complex female character Over the course of the series she comes to realize she’s actually better at business than most of the men.

These are the stories that compel me. Women and girls who are flawed, complex, finding their place in the world and what their lives could be that’s what intersts me. It’s the story of Bella, of Earthsea…it’s the story of anything. I’m getting a little redundant I guess, but that’s what interests me.

Do you feel like doors are opening now for there to be more female driven franchises with these kinds of complex characters?

 You hope so. Every time there is a successful there is a successful female driven film, people start saying “Oh this is going to be a whole new thing” and it never is. So we have to be diligent and keep pushing. I think The Hunger Games, which granted was a successful book, but I don’t think it exists on screen without Twilight, or in fairness it would have had a much harder road to get studios to accept that kind of heroine.  They always think “will people show up to watch a female lead”?  I’m like yeah!  Studios are finally having an awareness that girls are box office! Up until this point it’s all been about teenage boys and what they’ll watch and what 13-year-old boys want. Well 13-year-old boys are home playing video games, and they’re not coming to the movies they way they used to. Studio are finally realizing maybe they aren’t your core audience. Look at Twilight.  Women will see a film several times in a row that speaks to them and they’ll bring their friends.   They’ll buy the DVD, the tee shirt, …everything the studios thought were just for boys.  And let’s face it, we’re a pretty frickin passionate audience!

Reminder: Twilight Complete Archive Signing Sunday Robert Abele, Toni Trucks, and Erik Odom

If you’re going to the Twilight Convention in Burbank, why not stop by here:
 
WHO’S SIGNING: Author and film critic Robert Abele (http://www.lafca.net/members/robert_abele.html)
               Peter the nomad – actor Erik Odom (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3241634/)
               Mary the nomad – actress Toni Trucks (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1926337/)
SIGNING WHERE: http://www.DarkDel.com/ — again, they’re soooooo very close to the Burbank Airport Marriott.  This is the perfect post-con signing event late Sunday afternoon.
WHEN: This Sunday November 4th, 2012
WHAT TIME: 4 p.m. onward
 
Books ideally should be pre-ordered from the store before the signing, via Del and Sue at 1-888-DARKDEL (818-556-6660).  They also have Bella, Edward, Jacob character teaser posters, as well as the “running trio” final theatrical one-sheet – all already signed by Bill Condon- for the first 40 customers who pre-order with the store. 
 
There are  some limitations on what and how much of it can be signed that isn’t bought at the store – they are, after all, in the business of trying to sell books via their real brick-and-mortar store – so any fans with questions would be best advised to ring them at the store for clarification on what can or can’t be signed, and to PRE-ORDER BOOKS!

Melissa Rosenberg Breaking Dawn Part 2 Exclusive Lexicon Interview Part 1

Yesterday, Laura was able to sit down with Melissa Rosenberg and chat with her one-on-one about the final Twilight saga installment. Here is Part 1. Part 2 Will be out tomorrow.

One of my favorite things when these books are made into movies is that point of view expands. The books are from Bella’s point of view, so unless she’s right there you only hear about things, or you have to surmise what happened in another location. In this movie the world opens up: we see Jake transform in front of Charlie, the acquisition of the witness vampires, and Irina in Volterra. Which of the expanded point of view scenes was your favorite to write?

Well certainly Jacob and Charlie. You picture that and you think, “well how did that happen?” Did Jacob just burst into fur, or did he probably take his clothes off first? And then if you’re Charlie, you’re like, “What’s going on boy, put your clothes on!” And when you know you have both of those actors (Billy Burke and Taylor Lautner) who are so great with comedy, you can really write to them, knowing their strengths.

I also liked writing the gathering of the vampires. Particularly them finding Garrett (Lee Pace). I spent a lot of time talking with Stephenie over this. She has very detailed backstories for all of them. Because you’re getting into meat-eaters now.

Exactly, you now have the T-Rexes of the vampires coming to Forks. The cuddly, vegetarian Triceratops Cullens aren’t the only ones.

Even Garrett, who is one of the good guys, is one, and that expands your range of what you can do with him. What is he like around people.

Who was the most fun of the new vampires to write dialogue for?

Definitely Garrett. Alistair too, he’s all gloom and doom, we’re all going to die.

That’s actually a very cool way he’s written in the film. I think on the pages of the novel he gets a little lost in that vast influx of vampires, and people just remember him as a moody guy who goes to the attic. They don’t have a firm sense of who he is. I felt when I watched the film that he was a bit of a foil to the optimistic outlook of the Cullens. He was the voice of reality. Did you feel that way in writing it?

That is suggested in the books too. He is sort of the naysayer. They’re all going, “It’s fine we’re going to win” and he’s going, “I’ve been around forever. I’ve seen a lot. It’s a load of crap. You are not going to win.”

I honestly wrote major scenes for all of the new vampires, and then it comes to decisions. Is the action of the storytelling slowing down or even stopping. You have to start picking, and you feel like you are killing your children. It came down to who is driving the story forward the most.

Was coming up with who had a more prominent role among the new vampires a collaborative choice with you Bill Condon and Stephenie Meyer?

It was totally collaborative. We started looking at what was the emotional arc of the story. What pieces do you need to structure that. And in doing this, pieces start to naturally fall out. Some people you have to have with a speaking role, and others it breaks your heart . You go through feeling, “I wrote this scene. I love this scene”. And then you know it’s just not going to make it. And even sometimes things are shot, but later on in editing they have to make decisions and things go. I know there were some things I really loved with the new covens that didn’t make the final cut.

Well, hope spring eternal on the DVD.

You’ve worked on all the films, and in doing so you’ve had four different directors. Some came from a writing background, others purely from a director’s view. Looking back, who were you the most collaborative with?

Definitely Catherine Hardwicke on the first film. We had very, very little time. We had 5 weeks and we knew the writers strike was coming and we were trying to beat the clock to get it done. I’d write something, show it to her, get her feedback, revise, it was intense! Unfortunately, then the writer’s strike happened and I had less ongoing collaboration with her than I would have liked.

The next two movies were written ( New Moon and Eclipse) before the directors came on. I think I had more collaboration with David Slade as rewrites started.

But in reality, thinking about it, the deepest collaboration I had was with Bill Condon. I had written the outlines for the two movies, but I had no actual script. So, he came in at that stage. He’s an academy award winning writer, and that kind of thing can go either way. You can have someone who is like, “I’m a writer, but I don’t know how to tell you what I want so I’m just going to do it myself” which is certainly legitimate. I think Chris Wietz is more in that vein, which was fantastic with things he did it was a great job. Then, on the other hand, you have the writer/director who knows exactly what he wants and how to articulate it. And when you have Bill Condon as an academy award winning writer he’s uniquely qualified to articulate it. So when we first sat down he said, “I don’t want to write this. I want you to write this”, and at that point I was so tired and I thought, “really, don’t you want a part of it”? He made me work for my money (laughs) , but it was collaborative. It was hours and hours of bouncing ideas off each other.

I’d write an action sequence and give it to him. He’d give it to the stunt coordinators for their feedback and get their notes and I’d revise. I actually went down to Louisiana with him before shooting to talk some more. It was one of the best collaborations in my career.

Taylor Lautner’s Full 20 minute Q & A Breaking Dawn Part 2 Press Junket

Our friends over at Collider have another video up of yesterday’s press interviews. If the video is slow, you can read it here.

Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart on Mind Blowing Love Scenes, trio relationship

What is amazing vampire sex like, how od the three of them interact, and looking back over the years.

Robert Pattinson talks Mc Kenzie’s swear jar and advice to himself on Access Hollywood

Robert Pattinson talks advice to his younger self, enjoying the crazy, the fear of it being over.

Video Kristen Stewart defining the Twilight ride and more on Access Hollywood

Kristen talks being a mom on screen and the Twilight ride.

Video Taylor Lautner talks regrets, advice to himself and more on Access Hollywood

Taylor Lautner talks end of Twilight, advice to his younger self, regrets, travelling adventures and more.

Full Video of Kristen Stewart Q & A at Breaking Dawn Part 2 Press Conference

You can watch the video, or read the full transcript here if the player is slow. Laura asked Kristen question at the 4:50 mark. Later on in the video (21:00 mark) she is asked what Bella would want for Christmas and she says “I don’t know” and asked all the fansites what we thought. It was funny because we were all live blogging and had our heads buried in our laptops and didn’t realize at first she was talking to all of us and when we figured it out we totally froze. I finally shouted out babysitting from Rosealie

Maggie Grace and Mia Maestro on Seattle TV Talking Breaking Dawn Part 2

Check out the two members of the Denali coven!