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Paul Haggis Quotes - IQDb - Internet Quotes Database

Quotes from Paul Haggis


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Unless I'm really uneasy with what I'm writing, I lose interest very quickly.


When I discovered European filmmakers, it affected me so deeply. It redefined what cinema could be. I mean, 'Blow-Up' ends with a dead body and mimes playing tennis. What?


I loved American filmmakers when I was growing up. I didn't get to film school or anything. I was a very bad student. I just devoured film, but there was a point in my teens when I started to run a little film society.


In 'The Next Three Days,' even though it was a prison breakout movie, I was asking myself, 'What would I do? How far would I go for the woman I loved? How far would I go, and what would I do when the person then told me that they were guilty? Could I still believe in them?' So it was very personal.


I'm a filmmaker, and I was most influenced by Hitchcock's films. How he could plant such deep enriched characters and then make us care both about the antagonist and protagonist was masterful.


I made a very good living as a bad writer. I wrote a lot of comedies, 'Diff'rent Strokes,' 'Facts of Life,' while all my friends were doing the good shows, like 'Cheers,' but I loved it because I got to be a working writer in Hollywood.


My kids paid the price for my career. We can say it's for our family, but it almost never is. It's about us. It's just some of us can pretend better than others.


A lot of films made me love the movies, everything from Hitchcock to Godard. But the ones that really grabbed me were Costa-Gavras's films like 'Z' and 'State of Siege.'


You don't make a film because the audience is ready for it. You make a film because you have questions that are in your gut.


We're trying to reinvent Bond. He's 28 - no Q, no gadgets.


'Crash' was incredibly personal to me. So was 'In the Valley of Elah.' There were things in 'The Next Three Days' that were questions I was asking myself but couldn't answer, like how far would you go for love? Can you believe in somebody who can't even believe in themselves? But this is highly personal.


There's nothing more painful than writing.


The wonderful thing about Clint is you can never second guess how he is going to react to anything.


The great majority of Scientologists I know are good people who are genuinely interested in improving conditions on this planet and helping others.


Irish and Italian are my two favourite people.


I'm a deeply broken person, and broken institutions fascinate me.


I try not to think of actors as I'm writing because I think you do them a disservice by writing for things they've already done.


I thought 'The King's Speech' was great.


I miss my mother very, very much.


I like it when an actor is secure enough to ask questions, and the director is secure enough not to be threatened by that.