“Plus we’re both dual-disorder”
When Agatha Weiss returns to Los
Angeles, she makes an instant connection with the first person she
encounters: her limo driver, a would-be screenwriter who chauffeurs the
far more successful, and who becomes increasingly entangled in her
larger-than-life drama.
Taking the role
of Jerome is leading star Robert Pattinson, who wanted to work with
Cronenberg again on the heels of taking the lead role in Cosmopolis
(coincidentally, Pattinson played a billionaire who is a limo passenger
throughout that film.)
He was one of the first cast members to sign on, which Martin Katz says helped buy the project. “Robert’s
enthusiasm for Maps to the Stars is one of the things that really got
us underway. Jerome is not a large role but it’s very significant in the
story and his joining the cast gave us a terrific amount of momentum,” recalls the producer. “In a sense he is playing Bruce Wagner, who was himself at one time a limo driver and unemployed writer.”
Cronenberg was thrilled to reunite with Pattinson, and in such a different kind of role. “I think Rob was really happy to be part of an ensemble,” he says. “But
Jerome is also a critical character, a lovely character and it was a
chance for Rob to give a more naturalistic performance. I knew he would
be fabulous and he was.”
Pattinson’s experience working on
Cosmopolis with Cronenberg was so profound that he agreed to the role of
Jerome before reading the script. But when he finally sat down to read
it, he recalls, “Within two pages I was thinking wow, this is so
unbelievably different and hilarious. I don't even know what people are
going to make of this, but it feels dangerous. It’s sort of satirical
but it’s also a ghost story and it’s also a kind of thriller. It defies
genre.”
He came to see Maps To The Stars as more than just another L.A. story. “It’s really about people who lie to themselves – right up until the end,” he summarizes.
Yet within all that, Pattinson sees
Jerome as the most ordinary of the film’s roster of outrageously deluded
and desperate characters -- typical of a certain kind of everyday L.A.
dreamer, a regular guy with a regular job who nevertheless always
believes he is just one move away from becoming a major actor and
writer.
Read more of the notes
HERE.
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