It's frustrating when teams try to take me out. But there's a lot of other ways to win besides shooting.

The first year we actually did a lot of night shooting and the writers weren't even allowed on location.

I'm either shooting nine grams of coke a day or spending two hours at the gym. There's no middle ground.

When I got back from shooting 'Deception,' I was under contract with NBC, so I can't really do anything.

I always tell D-West, 'We're the leaders on the team, and if we go down, we've got to go down shooting.'

I like shooting in New York because I have such a connection to the city. I have so many memories there.

For every fatal shooting, there are about 3 non-fatal shootings. Folks, this is unacceptable in America.

There are such beautiful locations outside India, and the experience of shooting in Istanbul was awesome.

In 1958, I was shooting a movie in Florida, and I decided to go to Havana, Cuba, to see what it was like.

Scenes change while shooting. Nowadays, while you're shooting the movie, you're cutting at the same time.

I guess I get the most notoriety from my shooting. But I like passing and movement, making the game easy.

I can do a lot more by shooting from outside, score inside, penetrate, and make opportunities for others.

Typical news accounts and commentaries about school shootings and rampage killings rarely mention gender.

I wanted to give my first instincts a chance without shooting them down immediately, which I sometimes do.

I like having the ball in my hands and being able to make plays, but I think my shooting is an asset, too.

Sometimes shooting on a smaller scale, as long as things don't blow out of proportion, is very liberating.

I guess I'm used to TV where we don't really rehearse. You block it out, and then you just start shooting.

The new film I'm shooting in Jerusalem - which is partly why I'm here in Israel - is something I co-wrote.

I've made 'The Pilgrimage' - where I actually had to speak Gaelic - and I was shooting in Belfast as well.

I learned to not separate writing, shooting, and editing, it's all sort of one big mess of creative output.

I must admit, strong films are more interesting to me, as, by the end of the day's shooting, you feel good.

I can't be under the weight of the character for a 14-hour shooting day. I don't think anybody can do that.

You never have any idea where your movie's going to go when you're shooting - you're in this little bubble.

I imagine the world dividing into the people who want to feed their children, and the ones shooting at them.

Zombies, what are you going to do with them? Just keep chopping them up, shooting at them, shooting at them.

You can hear my dreams? God, you must never get any quiet. I'd be shooting myself in the head if I were you.

The difficult thing about shooting a television series is that you never have enough time. You really don't.

If people are shooting at you, it's human nature to be afraid. I was afraid. I'll be quite blunt about that.

Everyone has been really accepting and brought me into the family. I had a lot of fun shooting it [ Fast 8].

My first three movies, I didn't start editing until we were finished shooting. That's unthinkable to me now.

Brad Pitt is so good-looking there's a lightbulb inside of him shooting good-looking-ness in all directions.

People like Chris Nolan are shooting isolated sequences in IMAX. Those cameras are the size of a Volkswagen.

When you are shooting with a robot you can't improvise. You can't really... the script is kind of the script.

While shooting 'The Unit', I went to the Middle East twice to see the troops. I met some great men and women.

For me, personally, the most difficult moments had to do with not just terrorist attacks, but also shootings.

Do It Under the Influence Yourself! That's what we're shooting for! Get drunk and make your dreams come true.

I was so exhausted after fighting for the project for five years, shooting it was like the Bataan Death March

Shooting in Los Angeles is always pleasant and comfortable. Shooting in New York is like being on 'Survivor.'

A critic is someone who never actually goes to the battle, yet who afterwards comes out shooting the wounded.

In most Westerns, you know, people are shooting off guns all the time until you don't even notice it anymore.

I was so exhausted after fighting for the project for five years, shooting it was like the Bataan Death March.

If you take it as a compliment that you don't look your age, then you're really shooting yourself in the foot.

I still do a weekly opinion column for the Miami Herald, and it's like shooting fish in a barrel. Rotten fish.

I'm quite detached from failure and success. Once a shooting is done, I kind of close that chapter in my life.

Every time I'm shooting a movie I want to kill myself. Because I don't see the light in the end of the tunnel.

If you are out there shooting, things will happen for you. If you're not out there, you'll only hear about it.

Sometimes I don't fully accept it. It's tough. I miss doing old things. I miss shooting hoops with my friends.

It was comical because you're at a firing range, all these people are so seriously shooting their little guns.

When you're shooting super-low-budget - we had 20 days to shoot 'Diary,' and a little over $2 - time is money.

Once the shooting starts, we don't mind whether it is 43 degrees plus or minus 6 degrees: we just keep working.

Share This Page