Work harder than everybody. Read scripts, watch movies. Help other writers, it makes you better. And probably move to L.A.
More and more major businesses and industries are being run on software and delivered as online services - from movies to agriculture to national defense.
I just want to sing, I want to work on my music, I want to make my movies, that's all I want to do.
I've only seen a couple horror movies in my lifetime. I don't like the ones that make you scream out in terror.
I don't see that many movies lately that are actually about something, that are trying to challenge something about the way that people interact.
I've worked a lot. I don't like to watch myself. I don't go to the movies unless I have to go to the premiere.
When you make successful movies, everyone on set takes care of you, everybody is so nice and you disconnect from reality.
I'm very blessed that I get to dabble in both music and movies, and as long as people are willing to accept me in both roles, I'll be there.
Jesus is a half-naked guy, hanging, nailed to a cross, and then people wear that around their neck, and then those are the people that are upset about violence in movies.
I like to work on T.V. because it's like a normal thing, and then I like to do movies when I'm on break or hiatus.
I don't often see the movies I'm in; I'm usually disappointed in myself and it only serves to make me self-conscious.
I really wanted to go onstage. Not movies. But I ended up under contract to Paramount. Now I adore film work.
The first two movies I directed failed, when I was 21 and 23, and that was the greatest thing that could have happened.
James Cagney, Steve McQueen, I loved all those guys. I grew up loving the movies but had no desire to be in them.
I try to make two movies a year. To me, that's not too much. On top of that, I like to work.
I'm in a play on Broadway, I have an animated TV show coming up, I have a few movies that just came out.
I'd rather do a lot of movies than a TV series and do a lot of different roles than be stuck in one TV thing.
It's how the '70s were for movies, the 2000s are for TV. I think it's a phenomenal time for TV and to be involved in it.
Actors are really working with bodies, with their minds, and with their emotions. Feelings, basically. That's what movies are about, going from one feeling to another.
Mainstream animated movies are dumbed-down and sanitised: they make the world in their own image rather than exploring the limitless possibilities that are out there.
It's true - women want the fantasy. So give them romance - but without the desperation, wondering, and waiting you see in the movies.