From Indiewire:
(...)“Good Time” looks like it will continue the Safdie tradition of
visceral, gritty and utterly hypnotic indie filmmaking. It should also
be another unpredictable entry in Pattinson’s growing oeuvre. The actor
has become an indie favorite thanks to collaborations with David Michod,
David Cronenberg, Werner Herzog and James Gray. It’s safe to say
working with the Safdie Bros should give Pattinson the opportunity to
show off a completely new side of himself.(...)
From The Films Stage:
(...) Featuring original
music from OneOhTrix Point Never and Iggy Pop, the trailer shows off Safdies’ intense, on-the-ground style, hinting at quite a performance from Pattinson.(...)
From Collider:
(...)Pattinson has really carved out a fascinating career post-Twilight (same goes for Kristen Stewart).
Instead of seizing upon his superstardom and tackling a superhero movie
or leading action franchises, he’s opted to work with interesting
auteur filmmakers on challenging, often niche films. Just this year he’s
coming off of James Gray’s heralded The Lost City of Z, and now we’ve got Good Time to look forward to. In true A24 fashion this trailer makes the viewer very curious about just what this film really is.(...)
From First Showing:
(...)This trailer does a nice job of introducing the story and setting up everything, so dive right in. Also starring Jennifer Jason Leigh, Barkhad Abdi, & Benny Safdie
(as Connie's brother). This looks like it has an exceptional
performance from Pattinson, so at least there's that to look out for in
here. Enjoy.(...)
From THR:
(...)Robert Pattinson gets a serious makeover in the Safdie brothers’ man-on-the-run crime thriller Good Time, which will have its world premiere in competition at the Cannes Film Festival on May 25.(...)
From Entertainment Weekly:
(...)The brothers have garnered acclaim for their films Daddy Long Legs (2010) and Heaven Knows What (2014), but Good Time
promises to elevate the filmmaking team to another level. Pattinson is
easily the starriest actor the Safdies have ever worked with, and early
buzz suggests that this new performance is the most complex that the
actor has ever delivered.
(...) Check out the intense, atmospheric trailer.(...)
From Yahoo:
(...) Robert Pattinson has spent much of his post-Twilight career making adventurous films with daring filmmakers, from David Cronenberg (Cosmopolis) to David Michôd (The Rover) to James Gray (last month’s The Lost City of Z). He’ll be continuing in that vein with his latest, Good Time, which is directed by Josh and Bennie Safdie (Heaven Knows What). (...) With a ratty haircut, rough New York accent, and
air of sweaty desperation, Pattinson will be the axis around which Good Time’s mania swirls and should further cement his reputation as an actor drawn to unconventional projects.
Sure to be marked by the Safdie brothers’ hypnotic, expressionistic aesthetic style, Good Time will be one of the most exciting American films to premiere at Cannes later in May. (...)
From VMan:
(...)Produced by A24 and directed by Ben and Josh Safdie, the film is set to
premiere at Cannes Festival in France on May 25th. Following his role in
Lost City of Z, there plenty of anticipation for Pattison's
performance. The film is being called a career defining moment for
Pattison, as well as for the Safdie Brothers. (...)
From Indiewire:
(...)New York sibling directors Josh and Benny Safdie cracked the competition
this year with their heist thriller “Good Time,” but it’s likely to
attract the most attention for star Robert Pattinson. Now firmly into
his post-“Twilight” phase, the actor plays a bank-robbing New Yorker
trying to help his mentally disabled brother over the course of a single
frantic night. Pattinson, who has been in Cannes competition before
with David Cronenberg’s “Cosmopolis,” is well positioned to wow
audiences already enamored of his earlier roles with something edgier
and more surprising; he could be a strong contender for the festival’s
acting prize.(...)
From Nylon:
(...)The last time we saw Robert Pattinson, he was barely visible beneath a giant beard in The Lost City of Z. Now, in the brand-new trailer for the gritty thriller Good Time,
Pattinson disappears not just under a mop of bleached blonde hair and a
goatee, but under a believable Queens, New York, accent, too. Playing Constantine Nikas, a small-time
bank robber who’ll do anything to get his brother out of Rikers Island
after he’s arrested, it’s hard to believe this is the same actor who
donned fangs as vampire Edward Cullen. It’s yet another example of how far the actor is willing to stretch himself post-Twilight. (...)
(...)Following his career as a sparkly vampire in the Twilight movies,
Pattinson has made it his goal in life to challenge himself in weird and
offbeat roles in smaller films. Case in point: A24’s new crime
thriller, Good Time. Pattinson is almost unrecognizable here as a crook looking to bail his
brother out of jail following a botched robbery, one for which he was
clearly responsible on some level. Since Twilight, Pattinson has worked
with David Cronenberg a couple of times, he starred in the terrific
Australian road thriller The Rover, and most recently starred alongside
Charlie Hunnam in the massively underrated Lost City of Z. The guy has the goods, and he may never be recognized for it. But I don’t think he cares. Robert Pattinson is a great actor. There, I said it.(...)
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