The single most important component of a camera is the twelve inches behind it!
At my Rolling Stones' tour, the camera was a protection. I used it in a Zen way.
How can a society that exists on instant mashed potatoes, packaged cake mixes, frozen dinners, and instant cameras teach patience to its young?
Camera's are everywhere, the walls have eyes the sidewalks have eyes. Nothing completely happens without someone knowing about it.
I think at this point, I'd eventually like to work behind the camera. That's not to say I would never act again, I'm not quite sure to be honest.
I would still encourage somebody, if they wanted to make a movie, to just go take a movie camera. That's clearly been shown to work.
For an actor working in television or film, I think it's important to understand how the medium works - how the camera and lenses work and how the sound and the editing works.
I hate cameras. They interfere, they're always in the way. I wish: if I could work with my eyes alone.
I play football, and most football players are camera shy. We just want to be left alone; we just want to stick to what we do.
The cameras were electronic monsters, moving with them as they walked and staring with one big, perverted eye.
COVERT CONVERT If you don't believe in God, then believe in the hidden camera
There's no audience to wonderfully get in your way when you're doing a single-camera anything, whether it's a sitcom or drama or film. And I do mean that in the best way.
When the attention is on me, off-camera, I get uncomfortable - sort of shy and at a loss for words, as you can probably tell?
I won't do reality. That is done. And I don't want people following me around with a camera 24 hours a day.
In 1976, Kodak's first digital camera shot at 0.1 megapixels, weighed 3.75 pounds, and cost over $10,000.
My father was a television director, and I always knew I wanted to be in the industry, but I had thought my role was behind the camera as opposed to in front.
When we made 'Primary,' it was just one camera. We were trying to make ourselves inconspicuous.
Hollywood's a mecca, but it's not the final answer. You pick up a camera anyplace in the world, you can make a movie.
Professional camera crews are rarely there when a bomb goes off or a rocket lands. They usually show up afterwards.
At least when you're acting you can be someone. In front of the camera you have to be yourself. And who am I?
That was the beginning of modern acting for me. You don't have to tell a camera everything. It gets bored if you do and wants to look elsewhere.