I'm really scared of clowns, and for a while, I was scared to perform and sing in front of a crowd. Also, I'm not a big scary movie guy. They stay with me for a while.
I've always been someone who feels better, if I see what I'm going through in a movie.
When Pixar calls and says, 'Hey, you wanna be in a Pixar movie?' you don't do a lot of contemplating!
I've got to see my movie to see how I'm acting, see what little things I can learn about my craft.
It's hard enough to get any movie made, and when you take on these tough genres - and I've done it a couple times - it just makes the whole struggle more.
One fantasy is that I just do a Don Roos movie every year if that's possible. If he'd have me.
I grew up going to school and high school and then shooting a movie for a few months. It's an odd way to grow up and is kind of forced maturity.
Movie theaters still exist in spite of all of the alternatives that are available, video and video-on-demand and DVD and streaming video and all of these things.
I don't know why you are treating me like this. The only thing I have done is carry a pistol into a movie.
You know, when you start, especially with me, I didn't really know I was going to be a movie actress. I thought I was going to do theater.
When I make an American movie it's going to come out all over the world-it doesn't happen the same way for an Italian film or a French film.
If you're a movie actor, you're on your own - you cannot control the stage. The director controls it.
'Wall Street' was a very important movie for me in terms of my career. I won an Oscar, and then the film 'Fatal Attraction' came right after it.
Launching a Broadway show is like no other endeavor. It's taxing because you're present - it's not like cutting a movie and test focus-grouping it and filling out forms.
I'll always stand by the first 'Batman'. Even for its imperfections, people will never know how hard that movie was to do. A lot of that still holds up.
I am always surprised at what movie studios think people will want to see. I'm even more surprised at how often they are correct.
'Pied Piper' came to me all at once; I wanted to do a fairy-tale movie with some edge, but not 'dark,' per se.
Passion, emotion, love and romance they all look better in movies; in reality all you need is a big dick.
The fact that someone came forward and offered $1.25 million to make a movie was astonishing. We were also allowed to keep many of the original stage cast.
Trying to convince Warner Bros. to make a $30 million 'Veronica Mars' movie just wasn't going to happen, for understandable reasons.
I'm trained in musical theatre and 'Pitch Perfect' is the first movie where I get to really belt out. I beat Adele for that role.