It's not easy to walk out on a marriage and two young kids, and it's the most difficult thing I've ever had to do.
I found marriage somewhat stifling. I don't know that I am the kind of man who ought to be married.
Marriage isn't something you agree to do one day, and if things don't go right, then it's over.
I don't see the point in marriage: if you make a commitment, you make a commitment. Fidelity is important to me; it's about honouring that commitment.
Marriage brings up all the things I pushed to the back burner - the fears, the mistrust, the doubts, the insecurities. It's like opening Pandora's box.
A film is like a mad arranged marriage, with all these people who don't necessarily want to be with each other forced into this intimate, exhausting process.
I have a very realistic image of what marriage should be. It takes effort, but it shouldn't be the hardest thing that you do.
Before marriage, many couples are very much like people rushing to catch an airplane; once aboard, they turn into passengers. They just sit there.
My parents have a wonderful marriage, for many years. But I can't commit myself for such a long time.
I guess I just feel bad that I'm still going on bad dates when I should really be in a bad marriage by now.
Marriage is a big deal, but who's to say I'm not going to pull a Vegas and get married to see what it's like for a minute?
I'm not eager to jump into marriage again. I'm in the corner right now, wearing my dunce cap. That area is obviously a nightmare.
It took me too long to realise that if you go to a marriage counsellor to resolve problems, it's in his interest to keep the marriage going.
My mother and father met at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. He was a senior and she was a junior, and their marriage didn't last very long.
Ultimately, my greatest achievement is maintaining my career while sustaining a happy marriage and kids.
I believe in the institution of marriage, but one can't fix a time for it. Please don't predict it for me.
I think men who have a pierced ear are better prepared for marriage. They've experienced pain and bought jewelry.
I didn't think marriage worked. I thought everybody who was married was secretly miserable - that it was something they just put up with for their children.
Woody Allen movies notwithstanding, therapy, in the early eighties, was not exactly a hot conversation starter. Nor was it a favoured activity for dysfunctional couples or suffering individuals.
I'm always happy when I hear about people selling records or selling books or selling movies. It makes me proud of them.
I don't find movies interesting. I just want to do the movies that made me interested in getting into movies, and they're few and far between.