It's hard to see a film that's been made from a book that you really loved because it's such a different experience.
Sometimes when you're starting out with acting, you have to take what you can get to get experience and meet people.
You're always looking to have a unique experience as an actor, and definitely, being punched by a puppet ranks as a singular experience in my career.
You're working on being a father, so that is something that when you experience it you'll understand the profundity of wanting to protect something dear to you.
'Swingers' was a little closer to what my real experience was. 'Crazy Eyes,' whoever's experience that is, I'm telling you what, that was one heck of a ride.
I'd say that the whole 'sitting on the Iron Throne' experience is intended to be a novelty for people who don't have that many encounters with thrones in their day to day lives.
People grow; people grow apart, and cancer... I've had a very in-depth and personal experience with cancer, and it really causes a perspective shift.
You can tell when you watch a movie, usually, what the actors' experience was on the movie, because even the smallest of roles were interesting.
The whole book experience was a look into another world, the world of Gore Vidal and Norman Mailer.
From 20 years of experience hiring artists out of the schools, I know-they get worse every year. They're absolutely ridiculously retarded now.
My background has been very helpful for this experience. But everyone was so accommodating because they knew it's not the most comfortable position to be the new kid.
I didn't play video games because my parents didn't allow it. That was banned from my childhood experience.
I know a lot of Americans in Paris who have married Frenchmen. They keep bringing up their experience, the clash of civilizations, the clash of personalities.
Fatigue is what we experience, but it is what a match is to an atomic bomb.
It was fantastic playing Conan; it was such an experience to go out of the country and be this barbaric human savage child for a month or so. It was a blast and definitely a great experience.
I think everyone's experience with a terminal disease is so deeply personal and unique to the person, the context in which they're living and the relationships that they have.
There is only one issue: man's lack of experience in feeling his Divine self and his innate connection with the Divine. All other issues stem from this.
No matter what you're doing, live it. Make an experience. Have fun. Relate to someone. Take them in. Learn.
I prefer to think of the audience as a single living organism with which I am sharing a singular, never-to-be-repeated experience.
I started working on a TV show in Australia, straight out of high school, so I missed the whole university experience.
Weakness is something we don't like to admit we have. We hold it against people, until we experience it, and then we feel more compassion for it.