'Tropic Thunder' is one of my favorite movies of all time. 'Blazing Saddles.' Anything that will get me to smile.
Most movies, once the action starts there's no more characters. You say a couple of dumb lines and then there's just explosions until the end.
Julia Roberts and Sandra Bullock do romantic comedies. I do dark dramas. I do these movies well.
As an actor, I'm always playing solitary characters. But as a director, I'm always making ensemble movies, which focus on lots of people's lives and how they intertwine.
One of my top 10 favorite movies of all time was 'South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut.' 'Team America' is a work of genius to me.
When we did the pilot, I sort of pictured this guy pirating a signal and then this story unfolding of him building this satellite and these robots and watching these bad movies.
Ironically, I grew up watching Indian movies as a kid in Russia. I am quite familiar with Bollywood. I grew up watching 'Disco Dancer;' I watched it some 20 times as a kid.
I've followed Gary Oldman his whole career... I've watched the movies he's directed, like 'Nil by Mouth' - I've seen that five times!
I'll look at the script and I'll try to find as many books, movies, and pieces of music that I think are going to feed each scene or the character as a whole.
Coming from theater, and having been to acting school, and done little, small Australian independent movies, a lot of the time, it's always about character.
I do like to work. I have my kids' books that I do, I have movies that I do, and I model.
In all of the movies and films you see, people are always in crisis because that's what we watch. We watch them deal with crisis and resolve it.
I'd like to direct myself but I'm a cinephile and I also would like to just step behind the camera and be on the other end of making movies.
I actually have a thing about proper nouns. They clang on my ear in a weird way when I hear them dropped into movies.
I went through this very serious Woody Allen phase in college and a little bit after college. I still see his movies.
I don't think movies or television have any basis in reality at all. It's all just pretend. That's what's fun about it.
I think people who live in the worlds that movies are based on end up disliking them. Unless they're from a different time and era.
I am a huge zombie fan. I have probably seen the George Romero movies 100 times each, without exaggeration.
I feel like we're going to see a lot more movies that mix documentary style with fiction, more along the lines of 'District 9.'
Most Australians who've got an ear can do an American accent because we grow up listening to them on television and in movies.
A lot of people who saw 'The Avengers' didn't read comic books, don't like comic book movies, and enjoyed it. That was huge for me.