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Andrew Dominik Quotes - IQDb - Internet Quotes Database

Quotes from Andrew Dominik


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I like test screenings. I like to see a movie with an audience of strangers. I think it tells you a lot.


When you ask a bunch of people to see a film, and then invite them to comment on it and tell them it's a work-in-progress, they feel bound to offer an opinion.


Sometimes you see a movie and you can really feel that it's an actor putting in a performance. Someone said 'cut' and they're back in their trailer having a coffee or getting their hair done.


Sometimes you do complete run-throughs of scenes, sometimes you break scenes down into little bits. It just depends on what the actors like to do. It's almost like jamming.


Once you do something violent in a film, you don't have to do too much. You do it once and the feeling of violence just stays there, do you know what I'm saying?


I really believed Obama when he spoke in 2008, but I remember watching his victory speech after this last election and it was the same speech. Exactly the same speech. I felt like he didn't even believe it anymore. He seemed to be tired of saying the same thing.


I read books all the time. I'm just half looking for something to do; I mostly just read for pleasure. Occasionally I stumble across something that could be a movie, but I don't put a book down just because I don't see a movie in it, either.


I always feel that crime films are about capitalism because it is a genre where it is perfectly acceptable for all the characters to be motivated by the desire for money. In some ways, the crime film is the most honest American film because it portrays Americans as I experience a lot of them, in Hollywood, as being very concerned with money.


I actually don't like westerns much. I like good westerns, but it isn't my preferred genre. There are all kinds of westerns: acid westerns, '70s westerns, Nicholas Ray's neurotic westerns. The ones I tend to like are nutso westerns.


For me, the movie's always evolving as I'm doing it. I throw things in as we shoot, and I take things out as we go. I want to create a whole life and then select the pieces that best sort of describe it later, you know? So there's a lot of wastage when I make a film.


Actors look for characters. If they read a well-written character, and if they think the director's not an idiot, they're going to sign up and do some acting.


Obviously, a power player in a criminal organization doesn't have to persuade anyone. He can just do what he wants.


Masculine ideals have become very confused in the modern world.


It seems like women don't want men to be men anymore. They want men to be women. But they really don't want what they say they want. It's very weird.


I write a number of screenplays, and I've never really come up with a part for a movie star.


To me, regardless of who's in office, the government is strangled by business. And the government's priorities are dictated by business. I mean, why does America, even after healthcare reform, still not have free universal healthcare? I'm sure it has something to do with the insurance lobby.


I don't think human beings have changed in 2,000 years.


I don't know whether crime is dictating business or business is dictating crime.


Everybody is always trying to make the best movie they can. It's a process.


A lot of writing's going down dead ends that don't go anywhere.