Robert Pattison Says “The Drama” Costar Zendaya Spent 2 Hours on the Phone Explaining a Scene That Made Him Go 'Crazy'

Robert Pattinson’s costar, Zendaya, helped him understand “that there was no hidden meaning” in his line of dialogue, he recalled

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for National Board of Review; Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty From Left: Robert Pattinson; and Zendaya

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for National Board of Review; Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty

From Left: Robert Pattinson; and Zendaya

Robert Pattinson was "going crazy for three days" on a film — until Zendaya stepped in.

In a March interview for French magazine Premiere, Pattinson, 38, recalled preparing for a day of shooting opposite his costar in the upcoming film The Drama, from Dream Scenario writer-director Kristoffer Borgli.

“We had a scene together in it that was driving me crazy,” the Mickey 17 star said of his costar, 28. “I was desperately looking for its meaning, to the point of writing pages and pages of textual analysis… I ended up calling Zendaya the night before shooting the scene in question.”

Related: Christopher Nolan's Next Movie Revealed as Adaptation of Homer's The Odyssey with Huge A-List Cast

Joe Maher/Getty Robert Pattinson at the 'Mickey 17' premiere on Feb. 13, 2025

Joe Maher/Getty

Robert Pattinson at the 'Mickey 17' premiere on Feb. 13, 2025

Pattinson continued: “I shared my doubts with her, I spoke for two hours, and blah blah blah, and after a while, very calmly, she finally made me understand that the line just said what it meant to say, that there was no hidden meaning.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Prior to that, the English actor added, “There I was going crazy for three days.... I tend to bang my head against walls. Sometimes for no reason.”

Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. 

The Drama, also starring Mamoudou Athie and Alana Haim, counts Ari Aster among its producers. Per IndieWire, the romance comedy-drama “centers on a couple whose romance takes an unexpected turn before their wedding.”

The A24-distributed movie does not yet have a release date.

Reading too far into scripts is part of Pattinson’s filmmaking process, he explained in his Premiere interview, which covered his past roles in 2014’s The Rover, 2019’s The King and more. “I tend to stumble over the meaning of things,” he quipped. “To the point of overdoing it, trying to solve mysteries that aren't really mysteries.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Related: Robert Pattinson Worried He'd Have 'Mental Breakdown' in Dance Scene with Jennifer Lawrence: 'I Was Sweating So Much' 

Asked about playing characters who have a "victim side," he said, "My character from Twilight had a bit of that... I wonder where it comes from. An unconscious need for punishment? A repressed masochistic desire?"

"To compensate" for that, he added that his next role might be "a character who is very self-confident."

Pattinson, meanwhile, is making headlines for his titular role in writer-director Bong Joon Ho’s sci-fi satire Mickey 17, in theaters now.

Among his upcoming projects are Lynne Ramsay’s Die, My Love opposite Jennifer Lawrence, and Christopher Nolan’s adaptation of The Odyssey — again sharing the screen with Zendaya, as well as Tom Holland, Matt Damon, Charlize Theron, Lupita Nyong’o and Anne Hathaway.

Read the original article on People