TWILIGHT STAR'S TRIP A DREAM COME TRUE
It's a blossoming bromance between Twilight hunk Kellan Lutz and Aussie actor Daniel MacPherson on the set of new sci-fi flick SFv1. 
Confidential exclusively caught up with the pair on set of the Shane Abbess-directed film that's in production in Sydney and will also shoot in outback South Australia.
"We have a great time off camera just hanging out and powwowing," Lutz said of MacPherson. "He's a really cool dude, and acting wise he's got amazing chops." The feeling is mutual with Macpherson adding: "He's the all-American boy. We've got shared passions for things like exercise and football, so there will be a bit of that and also plenty of food and drink and good restaurants and whatnot." SFv1 is set "in a time of interplanetary colonisation" where mysterious Sy (Lutz) meets Kane (MacPherson), a lieutenant working for off-world military contractors.
Lutz, famous for playing Emmett Cullen in the Twilight films, has been in Australia for two weeks for the film, that also stars Rachel Griffiths, Temuera Morrison and Firass Dirani.
"I've been trying to work here for a long time," Lutz said. "A lot of Australians come to the United States to work, but for me Sydney, Melbourne, the Gold Coast, they've got a special place in my heart. It means so much for me to be here and to be a part of this production." Lutz, 30, has vowed to travel the country as much as possible, with Uluru the top of his list of places to visit.
"I dated (former Home and Away actor) Sharni Vinson and she and I would come down here quite frequently for a good couple of years," he said. "I just love the beach, and Australia is full of cities on the beach. The people, the accents, the chocolate - there's so much beauty.
Lutz has wasted none of his free time. He's been spotted on the Bondi to Bronte walk and on Friday visited Darlinghurst hotspot The Chalet. On Saturday he was in the stands at the Roosters-Eels game at Allianz Stadium."It is a home away from home, I really feel that," he said. "I want to do everything and anything Australian."