Tag Archives: sitter

True Or False? Is Tyga Letting Kylie Swipe Freely Through His Phone To Prove He’s Not Creeping Out On Her?

Tyga Allows Kylie Jenner Full Access To His Phone Tyga is pulling out all the stops to let his underage bae Kylie Jenner know she still holds the top spot. Apparently Blac Chyna’s screenshot texts not only pushed Tyga to tatt her name on him so she knows it’s real, but now he’s given her full access to his iMessages so she can be 100% sure that nothing extracurricular is going on with the mother of his child . As a chatty patty close to Kylie shared with HL : “They have an open phone policy. He’s given her his passcode and she’s given him hers, as well. Tyga has no problems with it and wants Kylie to have complete freedom to see everything he’s doing.” Hmmm, we don’t know about this one…seems like a lot to go through to keep a teenage girl, right? Can’t he just feed her young impressionable mind some convoluted lie or play some simple Jedi mind tricks on her and keep it moving? This comes right on the heels of Tyga making a huge deal about taking his mini-lover everywhere with him — even places that are 18 & up only. The rapper smuggled Kylie into an 18+ only appearance at a college campus where organizers expressly asked him to leave her with her sitter for the weekend. Via TMZ : Tyga performed at Cal State Fullerton’s Spring Concert this past Saturday, and according to our sources … concert organizers told him he should NOT bring 17-year-old Kylie to the show. We’re told not only did the university find their relationship questionable, but the show was 18 and older. Tyga must have known he had the school by the balls — they couldn’t afford to bring in another act at the last minute — because he went ahead and brought her anyway. While he was performing … she was chilling at a table full of chicken wings and other appetizers — which we’re told Tyga suddenly demanded when he arrived … an hour late. Organizers didn’t want to risk him bailing completely…so, we’re told they just let it go. Well, he might as well. It’s not like Kylie could get onto a college campus on her own anyway…

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True Or False? Is Tyga Letting Kylie Swipe Freely Through His Phone To Prove He’s Not Creeping Out On Her?

The Joys of Being John Malkovich on Criterion

The Film : Being John Malkovich (1999), available today on Blu-ray and DVD via The Criterion Collection Why It’s an Inessential Essential : It’s strange to think that a film with John Malkovich’s name in its title isn’t really considered to be “a John Malkovich movie.” Instead, Being John Malkovich is understandably normally associated with screenwriter Charlie Kaufman and director Spike Jonze, both of whom really broke out thanks to BJM ’s success. While Jonze reveals on The Criterion Collection’s new audio commentary track that he and Kaufman were dead-set on getting Malkovich for the film, Being John Malkovich could really be about any celebrity. At the same time, that’s one of the many things that’s funny about Being John Malkovich : It’s a metaphysical black comedy about what people projecting things onto celebrities that don’t necessarily have anything to do with those celebrities. Malkovich just happens to be the guy whose mind Schwartz (John Cusack) and his vampish colleague Maxine (Catherine Keener) invade after they inadvertently discover a miniature portal into his head, and so his comic performance is consequently often overlooked in discussions of the film. He’s the biggest butt of Kaufman and Jonze’s jokes (I love when Maxine casually insults him by saying that he has a “too-prominent brow”), but he also reaffirms his fantastic comic timing, as when he cops a feel after ineffectually cooing to Maxine, “Shall we away to the boudoir?” Malkovich also demonstrates a deceptively subtle knack for physical comedy, like when he gives a buffoonishly perplexed look after being told by a date that he’s “creepy.” In a moment’s time, he scratches his head and tucks his lower lip beneath his teeth. It’s pretty hilarious because it’s done with such sly conviction. How the DVD Makes the Case for the Film : Criterion includes a number of great little behind-the-scenes on its new two-disc DVD set. In an interview with comedian John Hodgman, Malkovich reveals that when he was first given the script, “I saw the title and didn’t really think much about it.” He then initially turned the project down at the behest of his producing partner Russ Smith, who wanted Kaufman and Jonze to make the film “about” someone other than Malkovich. Later, Malkovich was taken aside again by Francis Ford Coppola and introduced directly to Jonze, whom Coppola said “everyone would [eventually] be working for.” According to Malkovich, after he signed onto the project, Kaufman apparently cut “some of the worst jokes about me — meaning the most cruelest ones,” from the screenplay. “I like those jokes,” he tells Hodgman nonchalantly. “I think they’re really funny.” Ironically, while Malkovich says that the film, “isn’t at all about me, it’s about people’s perceptions of me,” he apparently suggested that Charlie Sheen play his character’s best friend in Being John Malkovich . (Kevin Bacon had apparently already turned down that role.) But Malkovich had never met Sheen until that point; he just “struck me as the kind of person I would go to in an existential crisis.” Other Interesting Trivia : There’s a really bizarre and hilariously unfocused audio commentary track on disc one, where Michel Gondry, who was originally supposed to direct the film (he would later work with Kaufman on Human Nature before their Oscar-winning collaboration Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind ) talks about everything but the film. At one point, he calls Spike Jonze up and jokingly browbeats him to confess that he fell in love with Keener on set. This is after Gondry wonders aloud if the cameraman got a boner when filming a POV shot from Malkovich’s perspective while he has sex with Keener. Gondry dismisses the idea that Malkovich became aroused by Keener but still insists that the cameraman and the director must have gotten sprung. I wonder what Malkovich thinks… PREVIOUS INESSENTIAL ESSENTIALS The Last Temptation of Christ The Sitter Citizen Ruth The Broken Tower Dogville Night Call Nurses Strange Fruit: The Beatles’ Apple Records Jeremiah Johnson Simon Abrams is a NY-based freelance film critic whose work has been featured in outlets like The Village Voice, Time Out New York, Vulture and Esquire. Additionally, some people like his writing, which he collects at Extended Cut .

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The Joys of Being John Malkovich on Criterion

Citizen Ruth: Looking Back at Alexander Payne’s Prescient Abortion Satire

What’s the Film : Citizen Ruth (1996), available on DVD and Hulu Why it’s an Inessential Essential : The premise — one woman’s attempt to have an abortion turns into a national debate and bidding war — was a bold choice out of the gate for writer-director Alexander Payne. Citizen Ruth is his first feature film, and like his subsequent work, it has a biting wit, absurdities from every corner, and deeply flawed characters. Ruth (Laura Dern) is a dim-witted screw-up who is pregnant for the fifth time; her four offspring have been placed elsewhere because of her addiction to inhalants. When she is charged with a felony for huffing “patio sealant,” the judge coerces her to terminate the pregnancy. In jail, she meets anti-abortion crusaders who start a tug-of-war with pro-choice rivals over the unborn child, who becomes widely known as Baby Tanya after a clinic doctor manipulates Ruth into imagining keeping it. Tackling this tricky subject matter, Payne found an unreal story to tell, except that part of it was real. In the DVD commentary, he and co-writer Jim Taylor reveal that the plot was inspired by the true story of a woman who was offered money by anti-abortion and pro-choice camps to honor their respective wishes for her fetus. The parallels to reality don’t stop there. In one of Dern’s best unhinged moments, Ruth screams at two overzealous medical staffers at a clinic, who then pull out all the stops and force her to watch a video of abortion footage. That seems far-fetched, though maybe not in places like Arizona, where a lawmaker recently proposed a bill that would require women to watch an abortion before having one. The state representative, Terri Proud, calls her idea “(The) Reproductive Games.” Truth is catchier than fiction. Why We Recommend It Now : Released in 1996, Citizen Ruth resonates today, of course, because the issue of affordable health care has evolved into a fight over reproductive rights. Although Baby Tanya, were she real/alive, would be old enough to have a Sweet 16 party this year, not much has changed in the public discourse. Payne skewers the radicals on both sides, who are largely motivated by impressing their leaders — Tippi Hedren, for example, as a mother/god figure to the lunatic pro-choice activists. Their behavior is over the top, but their ideologies still echo. Among the points the movie makes so nicely is that extremists tend to lose sight of the real people and issues involved. When Sandra Fluke testified about hormonal birth control, the point she made — that the drug treats medical conditions — was lost once Rush Limbaugh piped in and turned Fluke into an abstraction and a “prostitute.” Ruth is unfit to be a mother, yet a contingent of crazies think she should take a stab at parenthood, aided by 15 grand, because somehow it’ll just all work out. There’s something to be said for laughing so we don’t cry, and Citizen Ruth allows us to do that. The DVD has few extras, but it does feature a revealing commentary track from Payne, Taylor, Dern and production designer Jane Ann Stewart. Explaining that the film doesn’t take sides, Stewart says her team strived to make both camps look a little foolish. Payne gets to the heart of the matter, saying, “Jane, you asked me, ‘Is nothing sacred?’ And it’s true. Everything is sacred, and nothing is sacred. Everyone is open for being examined as a human being.” Other Interesting Trivia : Payne says the film’s limited release was probably the reason he didn’t receive one threatening letter over it, though he was concerned about potential violence at the time from groups like the Army of God. Dern recalls a conversation with the women who ran Planned Parenthood in Texas, who called her to say how much they loved being mocked in the film. Also, let the end credits roll a couple minutes for a hint at Ruth’s fate. PREVIOUS INESSENTIAL ESSENTIALS The Last Temptation of Christ The Sitter

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Citizen Ruth: Looking Back at Alexander Payne’s Prescient Abortion Satire

SAG and Golden Globe Nominee Jonah Hill on His First Award Season, His Directing Future and 21 Jump Street

Aside from a few honors of the Teen Choice and MTV Movie variety, newly minted

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SAG and Golden Globe Nominee Jonah Hill on His First Award Season, His Directing Future and 21 Jump Street

‘The Sitter’: The Reviews Are In!

Critics call Jonah Hill comedy an R-rated ‘Adventures in Babysitting.’ By Kara Warner Jonah Hill, Max Records and Landry Bender in “The Sitter” Photo: 20th Century Fox From the moment Fox unleashed the clever “Need a Sitter?” poster advertising Jonah Hill as a for-hire babysitter, we were intrigued to see what comedic genius might be born of the qualified actor/director combination of the “Superbad” star and “Pineapple Express” helmer David Gordon Green. Once the trailers hit, it was obvious audiences would be in for a raunchy, envelope-pushing experience, the effectiveness of which has the critical masses a bit divided and sitting at a 21 percent rating over at Rotten Tomatoes . Read on as we sift through “The Sitter” reviews: Plot Twists, Turns and Caveats ” ‘The Sitter’ is wickedly absurd. Every parent’s fears about the caretaker brought in at the last minute get amped up here. So getting one’s shorts in a knot about the situations that sitter Noah Griffith (Hill) puts youngsters Slater, Blithe and Rodrigo in is a waste of ire. The comedy breaks in viewers from the get-go by offering a twist on R-rated bedroom activity. Later, after Noah is sweetly guilt-tripped into a babysitting gig by his mom (Jessica Hecht), the movie proceeds to an ill-advised drug run. It’s a comedy with kids, not for kids. … Which leads us to a second caveat: This comedy is shameless about race. From its rap and R&B soundtrack, to the casting of Wu-Tang Clan’s Cliff “Method Man” Smith, to the in-your-face sistah Tina (played with nice vigor by Samira Wiley), it’s clear this comedy is made by that generation of filmmakers freed by the omnipresence of hip-hop to be a little gangsta themselves.” — Lisa Kennedy, The Denver Post The Performances “Some of the sting is eased by Hill, who navigates this movie’s wild ride through a raunchier ‘Adventures in Babysitting’ with a genuinely sweet sense of self-deprecation. Yes, he’s a sadsack loser, but he knows it, and his honest acceptance of that makes him easy to take. He’s also helped out by the great Sam Rockwell — who remains one of the consistently wildest and most daring actors out there — as Karl, a starved-for-affection drug dealer. And also aided by a surprising gay-pride subplot that delivers its own ‘It Gets Better’ message.” — Stephen Witty, The Newark Star-Ledger Mixed Messages “The filmmakers try desperately to skate that thin line between socially redeeming and wanton excess by having Noah dish out some bits of wisdom and occasionally indicate he might care about the kids. But it is very thin ice and Hill never finds his balance, to say nothing of his comic timing. Though table-turning ‘The Ransom of Red Chief’ themes abound, somehow the exploding toilet and all the other ‘funny’ mayhem, on which much of the film’s humor rides, seem sad instead.” — Betsy Sharkey, The Los Angeles Times The Final Word, Pro-Con-Pro Style ” ‘I’m not Mary Poppins,’ protests Jonah Hill’s Noah. No, you’re Elisabeth Shue, and ‘The Sitter’ is an unacknowledged remake of ‘Adventures in Babysitting’ with the raunch dial turned up to max. It’s smart, funny, agreeably perverse and simultaneously abrupt and exhausting.” — Kyle Smith, New York Post ” ‘The Sitter’ plays like an R-rated homage to the 1980s comedy ‘Adventures in Babysitting,’ with some ‘Date Night’ and lots of filthy humor thrown in. Spiked with some loopily inspired supporting performances (Sam Rockwell turns up as a freaky, tweaky drug dealer running the world’s most hilariously depraved coke den) and Hill’s characteristically inspired improvisational asides, ‘The Sitter’ is an efficient but uneven programmer, whose most valuable contribution to the cinematic landscape is its blessedly brief 80-minute running time.” — Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post “Hill is a strong comic, and this movie, considerably funnier than director Green’s last, the execrable ‘Your Highness’ — low standard — allows the actor to show off his beautiful timing (also evident in ‘Moneyball,’ but without the hijinks). Screenwriters Brian Gatewood and Alessandro Tanaka have barely a screen credit between them, but they understand the Hill persona, a little whisper here, an off-the-cuff insult that lands as softly as a kiss and a nonplussed double take followed by a quick rejoinder. Noah is the fat guy who wears a plaid flannel shirt underneath a jacket opened to reveal a clashing plaid lining. He’s also good and decent and open to admitting all of his faults. ‘I had a monthlong, intense addiction to Robitussin,’ he tells Slater, trying to put him at ease. ‘The Sitter’ is predicated on a belief that chunky Jonah Hill, or at least the persona he presents, is secretly supercool. While it turns out to be a wisp of a movie, on that front at least, it is persuasive.” — Mary Pols, Time Check out everything we’ve got on “The Sitter.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV First: The Sitter

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‘The Sitter’: The Reviews Are In!

‘Twilight’ Tops Box Office For Third Consecutive Weekend

‘Breaking Dawn – Part 1,’ which has ruled the box office since its premiere, is followed by kid flicks ‘The Muppets’ and ‘Hugo.’ By Ryan J. Downey Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart in “Twilight: Breaking Dawn – Part 1” Photo: Summit Entertainment Four movies in, the “Twilight” franchise continues to achieve new “firsts.” Over the weekend, “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1” became the first entry in the romantic vampires-and-werewolves series to maintain the top spot at the box office three weekends in a row. “Breaking Dawn” collected another $16.9 million, easily besting the $11.2 million claimed by expected champion “The Muppets” during a soft post-Thanksgiving weekend. The latest numbers are the highest third-weekend gross of any “Twilight” film. However, the $247.3 million gross of “Breaking Dawn Part 1” is still behind where “New Moon” had landed after the same amount of time in theaters. Unlike the critically reviled “Breaking Dawn,” film reviewers have been overwhelmingly positive about “The Muppets.” But the family-friendly film still declined 62 percent in its second weekend of release toward a total haul of $56.1 million. The franchise reboot of sorts will likely outgross “The Muppet Movie,” but it has a less than slim chance of ever beating the 1979 film’s attendance numbers. Two more well-reviewed kid flicks made the box-office top five. Martin Scorsese’s 3-D period piece “Hugo” was #3 with $7.6 million as it expanded from 1,277 theaters to 1,840. The filmmaker’s first family film has made an estimated $25.2 million thus far. The animated “Arthur Christmas” was #4 with $7.4 million, which reflects a second-weekend drop of only 39 percent. That’s the best post-Thanksgiving decline of any film since “Just Friends” in 2005. “Arthur” has made $25.3 million overall. “Happy Feet Two” wasn’t able to do anything to shake off its reputation as one of the year’s biggest flops as it landed at #5 with $6 million. The animated sequel’s $51.7 million gross is just 43 percent of what its predecessor made in the same period. And critics haven’t been kind. “It’s hard to resist dancing penguins, but ‘Happy Feet Two’ may make you want to try,” the Los Angeles Times wrote. In stark contrast to the teen-friendly “Twilight” sequel and the four family movies that comprise the top five, director Steve McQueen’s sex addiction drama “Shame” enjoyed the third-highest debut ever for a limited NC-17-rated release (behind “Bad Education” and “Lust, Caution”). Playing at just 10 locations, “Shame” had the weekend’s best per-screen averages on its way to collecting $361,000. Next weekend’s new releases will include director Garry Marshall’s celebrity-filled follow-up to “Valentine’s Day,” “New Year’s Eve”; a pair of R-rated comedies — Jonah Hill’s “The Sitter” and Charlize Theron’s “Young Adult”; and the well-reviewed Cold War espionage drama “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy,” which stars Gary Oldman as George Smiley, the fictitious hero of British author John le Carr

Jonah Hill Rode Kardashian Wedding ‘Roller Coaster’

‘I was with them on that journey,’ he tells MTV News of watching Kim’s wedding. By Kevin P. Sullivan, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Jonah Hill Photo: MTV News It seems that with all of the hullabaloo surrounding Kim Kardashian ‘s brief marriage to Kris Humphries and their almost immediate divorce, people lost sight of the real victim: Jonah Hill . During “MTV First: The Sitter,” Hill spoke with MTV News’ Josh Horowitz about his unabashed love of reality TV. “I am ashamed to say I watch that kind of stuff on TV. I don’t like that hipster ironic stuff, where you’re like, ‘Oh, I watch it because it sucks,’ ” Hill said. “If you’re going to watch it, at least admit that you’re pathetic and watch that awful stuff on television. I know it rots my brain and rots society, but I don’t care.” Hill’s poison of choice is “Millionaire Matchmaker,” but his love of reality TV doesn’t stop there. It goes someplace much darker. “I’m like an old Midwestern housewife. I don’t know, man. It’s pathetic. It really is,” he said. “I’m in the wasteland. I watch VH1 like ‘Full Court’ with La La and stuff like that. ‘ Tough Love Miami 2.’ I’m a disgusting person.” But when the conversation about reality TV turns to the Kardashians, things get serious for Hill very quickly. “I feel duped a little bit because I was all connected with the wedding. I watched the two-hour special. I was with them on that journey,” Hill said. The ups and downs of Kim’s short marriage to Kris proved too much of a roller-coaster ride for Hill. “I was on that roller coaster, and then the roller coaster just stopped, and they said, ‘Everybody off’ when we were right at the top. I couldn’t get off. What, am I going to plummet to my death if I get out of the roller coaster at this point?” Hill said. So the lesson to learn here is that the reality stars of the world need to be more considerate. They have to remember: Jonah Hill is watching. Related Videos MTV First: The Sitter Related Photos Kim Kardashian And Kris Humphries: A Whirlwind Romance

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Jonah Hill Rode Kardashian Wedding ‘Roller Coaster’

Jonah Hill Says Filming Sex Scenes Is ‘Never Sexy’

‘It’s very mechanical, and there are 800 burly crew dudes around. There’s not a strong vibe,’ ‘The Sitter’ actor jokes. By Kevin P. Sullivan, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Jonah Hill Photo: MTV News Jonah Hill has some advice for filming sex scenes: It’s best to do it with a friend. Otherwise, it’s going to get awkward. When it came time to film the sex scene briefly shown in the red-band trailer for Hill’s upcoming film “The Sitter,” he was lucky enough to be working with a friend. ” Ari Graynor plays my girlfriend, and she’s great. We’re really good friends, so it was not weird or anything,” he told us during “MTV First.” “It was actually really funny, and we laughed about it. She was so committed and cool.” In “The Sitter,” Hill plays Noah Jaybird, arguably the world’s worst babysitter. Noah has more than a healthy sexual appetite, and when Graynor’s character promises to go all the way with him if he makes it to a party, he has little choice but to take the kids along for the ride. For Hill, the key to surviving a sex scene is to make sure you’re friends with your partner beforehand. “If you’re friends with the person, it’s funny,” he explained. “If you’re not, it’s just awkward.” But “funny” is the best you’re going to do, Hill said. “It’s never sexy. You know what I mean? It’s never like, ‘Aw, man, that was really sexy,'” Hill said. “It’s like 8 a.m., and they’ve been drinking coffee. It’s very mechanical, and there are 800 burly crew dudes around. There’s not a strong vibe.” Then again, that’s not too different from Hill’s own sex life. “It’s like when I have sex in real life: 8 a.m., coffee, mechanical crew members,” he joked. “The Sitter” hits theaters on December 9. Check out everything we’ve got on “The Sitter.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV First: The Sitter

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Jonah Hill Says Filming Sex Scenes Is ‘Never Sexy’

Jonah Hill To Sit Down For ‘MTV First: The Sitter’

Hill will introduce an exclusive clip from the babysitting caper before a 30-minute chat Thursday at 7:56 p.m. ET on MTV and MTV.com. By Eric Ditzian Jonah Hill in “The Sitter” Photo: 20th Century Fox Our first extended opportunity to chat with Jonah Hill came in the summer of 2005, when we met up with the then largely unknown actor and his co-star Justin Long on the set of “Accepted.” “I wouldn’t say we’re the next Farley and Spade,” Hill told MTV News of his onscreen collaboration with Long. “I would say we’re the next Rosie O’Donnell and Madonna.” And so the comedic gauntlet was thrown down. Hill has been making us laugh ever since, cracking us up during interviews and bringing the funny in “Superbad,” “Cyrus,” “Get Him to the Greek” and many more. To celebrate his latest, “The Sitter,” and because we just have such a good time talking with Hill, we’re very proud to announce “MTV First: The Sitter,” an exclusive sit-down with the actor. On Thursday at 7:56 p.m. ET on MTV, Hill and MTV News’ Josh Horowitz will take over the airwaves, where they’ll introduce a previously unseen clip from the film and chat for a bit before continuing the conversation online for a full 30 minutes. Directed by David Gordon Green (“Pineapple Express”), Hill stars in the new movie as a reluctant babysitter who takes three kids into New York City because he’d rather meet up with his girlfriend than stay stuck in the suburbs. Not such a wise decision, as it turns out drug deals, car crashes and general debauchery take hilarious precedence over more mundane babysitting activities. The movie also stars Max Records, Ari Graynor, Method Man , JB Smoove and Sam Rockwell. During the “MTV First,” we’ll not only talk about “The Sitter,” but also have Jonah analyze some of the best cinematic babysitters in history, answer your Twitter questions and dish on the very latest news about Hill’s upcoming adaptation of “21 Jump Street.” Join Jonah Hill for “MTV First: The Sitter” on Thursday at 7:56 p.m. ET on MTV! Check out everything we’ve got on “The Sitter.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos ‘MTV First’ Hires A ‘Sitter’

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Jonah Hill To Sit Down For ‘MTV First: The Sitter’

‘Twilight’ Fan Christina Perri Pens ‘A Love Song To Edward And Bella’

Admitted ‘Twi-Hard’ is ‘unbelievably honored’ that ‘A Thousand Years’ made the ‘Breaking Dawn – Part 1’ soundtrack. By James Montgomery Christina Perri Photo: Tim Mosenfelder/ Getty Images For any artist, getting a song on a “Twilight” soundtrack is a pretty big deal. But for Christina Perri , whose “A Thousand Years” made the cut for the upcoming “Breaking Dawn – Part 1” album , well, “pretty big deal” is an understatement. Perri is — to put it mildly — rather obsessed with the series, as she told MTV News on Tuesday (September 27). “Yes, I am 1,000 percent a ‘Twilight’ fan. I can’t even deny that I am actually, in fact, a Twi-Hard and have a ‘Twilight’ tattoo,” she laughed, also revealing that she’s Team Edward. “I got a tattoo on my wrist that says ‘bitten,’ and it’s written in the font of all the book titles. So, yes, I am of one the big, geeky fans.” For Perri, who already found success with her hit “Jar of Hearts,” landing “Breaking Dawn” was a career-defining moment, not to mention a dream come true. Especially since, until the final track list was revealed Monday, she had no idea if her song made the cut. “I’ll never forget going to the screening of the movie. But, for me, having this opportunity is also such a wild card, because it’s Hollywood, and you never really know. … I wasn’t even sure I was going to be on it until yesterday, when I saw it in print,” she laughed. “So I tried not to get hyped out, because it’s one of my favorite movies, one of my favorite books, one of my favorite soundtracks, and that could potentially freak out the little songwriter in me. “So I tried to put that aside and take it one step at a time, went to see the movie and cried like a baby, because it’s so good, and I felt so lucky to be there,” she continued. “And then went home and wrote a love song to Edward and Bella … and to have it be chosen, I’m unbelievably honored.” She wrote that love song based less on the screening she attended (“It wasn’t finished,” Perri said. “But I still cried. Seriously, that’s how good it is”) and more on the emotions she felt reading Stephenie Meyer’s series … in particular, the star-crossed love affair between Edward and Bella. “When we went to watch the screening, they told us to see where there was temporary music added and just jump into those scenes a little harder,” she explained. “But I’m fortunately a fan of the movie and the characters, and I feel like, by reading these books, I can step into that feeling that Edward and Bella have for each other. So [songwriter] David Hodges and I sat down, and it just came out in one afternoon. I feel like it was all meant to happen; I feel like it was all waiting inside me, waiting to come out.” While she doesn’t know where “A Thousand Years” will be used in “Breaking Dawn,” Perri said it’s not all that important to her. She’s just counting down the days until the film’s premiere, when, finally, she’ll get to hear her song on the big screen. And after that, all bets are off. “For me, personally, this is one of my dreams coming true. And the fact that it’s on the soundtrack, I’m seeing it, but I’m not sure I’m quite believing it,” she said. “I have a feeling when I’m sitting in the theater with the cast, and the movie comes on and my song happens, that I’m probably at that moment either going to combust with excitement or finally believe it and probably cry a little.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1.” For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com . Related Videos ‘Twilight’ Stars Talk ‘Breaking Dawn’ Related Photos Twilight: Breaking Dawn Related Artists Christina Perri

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‘Twilight’ Fan Christina Perri Pens ‘A Love Song To Edward And Bella’