I'm too sensitive. I could not show up to a murder scene and do anything like that. It would break me instantly.

When I was filming the death scene [in Inglourious Basterds], and I'm killing somebody, I had to work myself up.

I bet that if you actually read the entire vastness of the U.S. Tax Code, you'd find at least one sex scene . . .

I'm always looking for the idea in a scene or the philosophy that makes a scene worth existing beyond exposition.

Chicago's like Melbourne - there's a city center, there's public transport, and there's more of a cultural scene.

I think I tried on the hardcore scene's outfits maybe once, and then I just figured I'd stick to Hawaiian shirts.

One day, a new fabric appeared on the scene. PVC was shiny, waterproof, and unlike anything I'd ever seen before.

To play well the scenes in which we are 'on' concerns us much more than to guess about the scenes that follow it.

I was never NOT confident about doing scenes without my shirt - and now I'll find any excuse to take my shirt off!

Who that hath ever been Could bear to be no more? Yet who would tread again the scene He trod through life before?

When I do scenes with Alec Baldwin, he just stares at my boobs. That's how good of an actor he is, he finds a way.

I was surprised by how much I loved Portland. It is so wonderfully creative without being artsy. Great food scene.

I don't know Gov. Palin. I've certainly seen her, since she came on the scene, you know, running with John McCain.

If the boy and girl walk off into the sunset hand-in-hand in the last scene, it adds 10 million to the box office.

If you're going to walk into a scene on a stage, you've gotta know what room you just left and what just happened.

Since I am a person who starts work without clear knowledge of a storyline, every single scene is a pivotal scene.

The scene was set. All that was required was an action, a cold start, instant and brutal as beginnings always are.

If I'm winning and looking impressive and being on the scene, the fans are going to start demanding bigger fights.

The romance stuff is easy. A sex scene... that's hard, because you don't know what to do. Those scenes are awkward.

I hope to be on the scene for a long time. I'd love to be old and gray and still be working in this [horror] genre.

I love directing scenes that I'm not in because suddenly I really feel like a filmmaker which is a different thing.

I'm more into MMA than any other sport. I watch a lot of the UFC fights. I have since it first came onto the scene.

If you have a dishonest moment, you're going to lose the audience. So I had to not only light myself in the scenes.

I hate when you see a film and after one scene you know what's going to happen and you can predict the whole story.

A lot of lines in movies were written, but I'm always improvising. Once you get into the scene, it just comes to me.

Country seems to be finding a bigger audience. Certainly an audience out of the general country scene is finding me.

Rewriting isn't just about dialogue; it's the order of the scenes, how you finish a scene, how you get into a scene.

All I can do is keep my nose down and shoot the scene, shoot the scene, make it funny, make it funny, make it funny.

Film acting is so different from theatre acting, and TV is about letting things pay off and not winning every scene.

You can't steal every scene. There are scenes in which you need to sit back and do a lot less, verbally, physically.

In every relationship, sooner or later, there is a court scene. Accusations, counter-accusations, a trial, a verdict.

A strong emotion, especially if experienced for the first time, leaves a vivid memory of the scene where it occurred.

As an insecure writer, I'll finish a scene and worry there's a better version of it. Or it could be elevated somehow.

I listened to all types of music, and obviously when I got to Seattle I was very much aware of the music scene there.

I don't take any project lightly. Every project is important for me. In fact, every scene in every film is important.

As an actor I want to do as many takes as I can. I wanna shoot the scene... or shoot the shot 'til they make me quit.

Gradually the live TV scene simmered out, replaced by film, and that took place in L.A. So many actors left New York.

Growing up in the Raleigh theater scene was a big factor in developing the ability, which I have now, to be freely me.

I can't read fiction without visualizing every scene. The result is it becomes a series of pictures rather than a book.

Cinderella obviously got caught up in the hair metal scene, but they were such a blues band. And such a good live band.

There's nothing sexy about doing a nude scene. It's rather uncomfortable. I like dressing up rather than dressing down.

It was like passing the scene of a highway accident and being relieved to learn that nobody had been seriously injured.

I like getting carried away by what is happening and then decide each scene based on the actors, the set and the light.

When the Chicago rap scene came about, I listened to all of the upcoming artists like Lil Durk, Chief Keef and G Herbo.

A scene is never completed, but simply abandoned when the search for perfection is no longer producing positive results.

I treat any scene the same - dialogue, action - you're still creating something in character. It's all acting, fighting.

When I read something, I picture that scene in that detail. That becomes very similar to composing a photo in real life.

A fight scene with a crazy can be quite physical. You don't feel it while you're acting, but each day you go, that hurts.

Every artist joins a conversation that's been going on for generations, even millennia, before he or she joins the scene.

Playing heroine was never an aspiration. If I had been particular about it, I would have faded out of the scene long ago.

Share This Page