College on for sure... I'm scared to say it cause it sounds like a family movie, but if my kid was 7, 8, 9 I would take her to this quickly and gladly!
Actually, when I'm not filming a movie, my beauty approach is really natural - I prefer a bare face that looks really healthy and dewy.
There just is exponentially more money in the movie business than in the music business. As a result there are more people involved in the creative process.
The theater business has allowed me, in a way the movie and TV business has not, to do very, very interesting work. So that's what I do.
The movie business is very much like that: people in authority making purely emotional decisions instead of interesting rational ones.
Dad almost died of a heart attack in the middle of making Apocalypse Now, the biggest movie of his life. It doesn't make you want to jump into that business.
After three major movies, I was like, 'Oh, I guess you're supposed to get a publicist?' Girls that are in the business now that are successful are more savvy.
As you grow up and get educated in the business, you go from, 'I want to do movies' to 'I want to work. In whatever.'
Now with all this movie business, everybody's coming around wanting to know everything that's happened since I was four. It's like going to an analyst.
There's a real cowardice in the movie business. If you don't meet the right crazy people, you can't do it.
The left-leaning thinking that dominates the movie business follows a common liberal instinct to deny the spiritual dimension to every problem, thereby profoundly compounding the difficulties.
In terms of the movie business, being in a 'Lord of the Rings' has given me more interesting options as work.
I don't like business talkers, you know, people who are constantly like, 'Blah blah blah movies.' I find it incredibly boring.
Cell phones tend to bring us more inside of our lives whereas movies offer a chance to escape, so there are two competing forces.
I'm not too proud of the movies I made as a grownup except for 'That Hagen Girl', which nobody remembers but which gave me a chance to act.
Thirty years ago, we were in a movie theater and thought it was so cool because we were finally delivered from the horrors of stained glass and wooden pews.
As I told the students every time I visited a campus, you are the director of your own movie, and if you aren't enjoying what you are doing, change it.
There are lots of people with mental health disabilities, and that's just the way their life is; it's not like you see it in the movies.
My friends tell me I'm the most boring celebrity they know! A typical night for me is at home in California or watching movies in my pyjamas.
It gets so boring at home. After all, how many reruns of Abbott and Costello movies can a guy watch on television?
As a boy, I was never interested in theater because I came from a working-class Scottish home. I thought, 'I want to do movies.' Then it was finding the means to do it.