I think cinema, movies, and magic have always been closely associated. The very earliest people who made film were magicians.
When newspapers started to publish the box office scores of movies, I was horrified. Those results are totally fake because they never include the promotion budget.
Horror is so often a 'thinkless' genre, sort of considered popcorn movies, but you really put a lot of, not just heart and soul, but a lot of physical energy into it.
I've always been a follower of silent movies. I see film as a visual medium with a musical accompaniment, and dialogue is a raft that goes on with it.
All these horror movies are slasher film now. I like them, they're fun, but they wink at the audience and you're really not terrified through the movie.
My husband and I are writers, and I wish I could write faster. There are not a lot of movies made with black actors in mind.
I do have friends who make movies, but for the most part, I never really wanted to feel like I was part of an industry.
I'm not a video brat. I don't derive all my inspiration through movies. I get it from a lot of other places, too.
I never really feel wrong while making movies. I know myself, and I know that my intentions are pure and I'm on the side of righteousness.
When I started to watch some of the films I'd done, I realized I was doing movies that I might not actually want to see.
I'm always happy when I hear about people selling records or selling books or selling movies. It makes me proud of them.
I think you'd have to literally live in a cave to not know anything about 'Twilight'. I've seen a few of the movies, but I haven't read the books.
I'm very particular about the kind of music that I record and sing, and it would be the same way about the kind of movies that I would do.
When I was a kid going into the movies, you weren't force-fed information everywhere you looked about what the movie was going to be.
I came to 20th Century Fox to do movies, and then they started a network, and they asked me to do a show as part of their starting what became the Fox network.
The comedy community is very friendly right now. I think that's why you see all the synergy and people doing each other's movies.
Bond is the longest-running franchise ever and there's a reason for that: they are action movies but they are also touched by current events without being political or too serious.
I have a maple leaf tattoo over my heart, quite literally, and my two favorite things on Earth are being in Canada and making movies.
I look back at my filmography, and I'm pretty jazzed with the stuff I've been part of. They're all movies I'd like to see.
Bill Hanna and I owe an awful lot to television, but we both got our start and built the first phase of our partnership in the movies.
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.