Bad movies are when people go, 'oh, I wasted $10 bucks and 2 hours and I don't even want to go back again.'
I don't see my movies. I think it's healthier and safer to keep a bit of distance. I'm afraid to be disappointed.
Sometimes I think that I understand my movies after I make them. Really. I go very often off of instinct.
I don't go see big, silly movies. I like small things about regular folks, you know?
I can't just sit around and do nothing. Although, I can sit on the couch sometimes and just watch movies.
The whole thing with animated movies is that it's very hard to get out of your head because it's very moving through each line systematically.
I've never made any horrible, horrible movies. If you don't ruin your reputation, you can always get work.
Mostly in movies an actor has to come to a mark, an X, and deliver his line - but that's so artificial, that's not how people really behave.
As most actors/actresses, I don't like to watch my own movies, either, and I never look at the dailys while filming.
'Mean Girls' is literally one of my favorite movies. It's just such a classic. Everybody has seen it, and me and my friends quote it all the time.
I go to the movies a lot, and I regret when I see some actor that I used to like, to find them offering no more surprises.
I think I've done 200 plays and 125 movies, so I've been very lucky to have made a living at acting.
And like everybody else, I like the Rocky movies, but if you look at them again you can see all the misses, but the intensity of it, but that wasn't what this is.
As a kid, I liked the 'Halloween' movies and 'Nightmare On Elm Street' and all that kind of stuff. But as an adult, I really don't watch much horror, to be honest.
The theoretical casting part of movies is the funnest part. You really can imagine so many different versions of a story based on who's embodying it.
Well, acting has been a dream of mine since I can remember; being in the movies and acting, having those experiences.
I play drums and guitar, I snowboard, I do martial arts and acrobatics. I go to the movies every Friday.
Everybody has their own style. If you went to the movies every week and everybody acted the same way Tom Cruise did, boy, wouldn't that suck?
People come up to me all the time in New York. Not for autographs, but to talk about movies, often in a very scientific way.
I still can't get over the idea that respectable adults now go to see superhero movies and that such films get reviewed in the 'New Yorker.' Clearly, I am seriously out of step with the times.
I'm not mad about movies, there are too many people involved in the making of them, and they lack a definitive creative focus.