You know what makes me teary? Goya. Goya makes me cry.
Film is, to me, just unimportant. But people are very important.
Aamir discussed the emotional journey he embarks on with each film.
The Future,” says Ian, in a film-trailer voice. “Coming soon, to a Present near you.
In the late '70s, maybe just before I started, there was still an attitude that if you did film you didn't do TV and vice versa, but that's gone now.
I was lucky enough to get a very good agent at the age of 15, and got my first film when I was 16, so it's been rolling on since then.
In this age of consumerism film criticism all over the world - in America first but also in Europe - has become something that caters for the movie industry instead of being a counterbalance.
It's amazing that this is still news to people, but that affects the final outcome of the film. When people are treated well, and they're made to feel valued, they give 110 percent.
You know, the reward for 'Captain America' is amazing. It's always fun to see a giant spectacle film and see the fun stuff - the special effects.
I saw 'The Artist.' It's really beautiful and it's all done to the letter with all the silent film techniques. The costumes were amazing and the dog is so good.
'Bambi' is an amazing film, and when you watch it today, it's just as beautiful. It's timeless. It's just as beautiful today as it was back then.
In fact, it is amazing how much European films - Italian, French, German and English - have recovered a certain territory of the audience in their countries over the last few years.
I would've been intrigued by being a film director. I would've been intrigued by politics. I thought about architecture.
I mean, certainly writing, painting, photography, dance, architecture, there is an aspect of almost every art form that is useful and that merges into film in some way.
If you consider film an art form, as some people do, then the Western would be a truly American art form, much as jazz is.
I always tell younger filmmakers, it's not just about the acting or the art itself. It's about how big of an audience watches your film.
I think the point of art is to be controversial in a lot of ways. It's to cause conversations, and it's to get people excited about and talking about the things that the films are about.
I think it's always hard for people to get their head around the fact that populist, commercial films can also actually be great works of art.
As I've gotten less righteous, less pedagogic, I have become more loving of the artificiality, the art form, the imitation of life in film.
First of all, what in this world does not revolve around money? But money is a big part of film, unlike a lot of other art forms.
One thing that I always liked about fashion was that it was tied in with music and art and film.