Nobody could dissapear to their trailer once it was up and running, you were all there on the same stage. It was 10 days of rehearsal and 10 days of shooting, which was very tiring.
We had a week off in the middle of shooting, but as soon as everyone stopped, we all went down with six different types of flu and other unmentionable diseases.
It's all about having fun and shooting something that you like. Where it goes afterwards is up to the movie gods.
If you're going to go to the moon, you don't shoot the rocket right at the moon. You have to go at it obliquely.
There's no way around it - drama is very difficult to shoot. It's very heavy and something that you carry with you for the course of the day.
I'm always kind of hoping that I'll get a movie that shoots in Alabama so I can go back and kind of get a break from my city life.
The entire time I was up shooting 'Suits,' I was running back to my trailer to help get 'Nine Circles' produced. It's a no-brainer for me to keep that part of life alive.
'Red Dawn' was really the most fun I ever had making a movie, because I love Westerns, and I love the idea of being a tomboy, and riding horses and shooting guns.
Slick: I wanna shoot someone y'kno and this feels like just the gun to do it with.
The Joker: [after shooting Bruce Wayne] Why is it everytime I come for you somebody always gets in the way?
In the time between records, I always have lots of stuff going on. I shoot photography, make little sculptures, play video games.
I was in Deadwood at the time and on hearing of the killing made my way at once to the scene of the shooting and found that my friend had been killed by McCall.
If I had been with all the women that I was said to have been with, I wouldn't have had the time to shoot a single movie!
Working on a film, the setup for an action sequence takes a long time, and we need to shoot the scene many times to get different angles.
For a London play, rehearsal time would be four weeks for the entire show. In films, I'd spend six weeks on the big dance numbers to get them perfect before the actual shooting.
'The Squid and the Whale' I shot in 23 days. I would have loved more time for it at the time, but in some ways that kind of kamikaze way of shooting was right for that movie.
Same thing with film, by the time you've finished shooting and you've really been into everything, you've touched up everything in the editing room. You've gone in there and taken little bits from everything.
[after shooting the crow] Top Dollar: Quick impression for you: Caw! Caw! Bang! Fuck, I'm dead!
[Funboy pulls the trigger, blowing a hole in Eric Draven's hand] Funboy: Bingo! He shoots, he scores!
Major John Reisman: You know what to do, free the French and shoot the Germans!
Joe: To kill a man you shoot him in the heart. Isn't that what you said, Ramon?