
Kristen Stewart promoted her new movie On The Road with various magazine and entertainment websites. Check out the interviews below!
“Thanks, man. Thanks,” says Stewart, when told it was good of her to put herself out there….[Kristen is] just a cool chick who’s smart and well-read, with On the Road being a favorite.“I was it a freshman when I read it. I was projecting to the future a little bit. Is that what’s on its way? It was about knowing that I wasn’t there yet. I hadn’t realized what my ambitions were. It made me less insecure and a little bit more hungry.”She’s not kidding. “I would have done anything on the movie. I would have been any crew member. I would have followed the crew in the car as a fan just to be around it,” said Stewart.
Read more at USA Today
On Marylou and Dean’s relationship:
“They really are ‘simpatico.’ It was a tumultuous relationship. And it’s hard to love like that, but they were so in love with each other and you don’t know this from reading the book, but they stayed lovers until the end of his life,” Stewart said “He kind of raised her and she always had a place in his heart, even though there were a lot of spots in that heart, but she was definitely one in the center and the same goes the other way around,” Stewart said of Marylou and Dean, the On The Road names of the real-life individuals described by Kerouac. “They both helped each other grow up.”
On the relevance of ‘On the Road’ today:
“I think it’s a good time to see this story visually because we are not shocked by some of the things that we were so shocked by before and it would have veiled it,” said Stewart. “It would have been so shocking seeing people doing drugs and having sex that you wouldn’t have seen the spirit of [On the Road]. You wouldn’t have seen the message behind it. Maybe it would have been good because it would have forced people to look, but maybe they weren’t able to do it then.”
Read more at Movieline
“TIFF? ‘How’s your TIFF going,’ that’s what you said,” she teased. “But it’s good, it’s good. Last time I was here for ‘Into the Wild,’ and I don’t think I’ve been back since, so it’s fun.”Needless to say, a lot has changed since her last visit to Toronto in 2007; Kristen has gone from a supporting actor to a celebrity headliner, whose appearance at this year’s festival has drawn massive crowds of media and fans alike to the “On the Road” red carpet. But for Kristen, the most exciting part of being at TIFF is seeing the movie in its finished state; although she’d gotten a glimpse at the early cut of “On the Road” that had its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in May, the fresh, final cut that debuted in Toronto was new to her. How does the new cut compare to the one she saw back in May?“I love both of them so much,” she gushed. And as for how the two versions differ: “One’s longer, I think,” she mused. “Maybe they can have this cool thing where they release a director’s cut or something.” (Though she also admitted that such a thing was unlikely, since the film that premiered in Toronto is the one approved by director Walter Salles.)
Read more at MTV
Vanity Fair interviews Kristen Stewart and Garrett Hedlund:
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