What song gets you out of a bad mood?
What song captures how you feel when you're down?
What song captures what life is all about?
Which song feels like it was written by you?
What song reminds you of someone you've not seen in a long time?
I don't really care how much the latest superhero film took at the box office, although I'd probably know if you asked me. When I watch a film the main thing I am looking for is a good story. I like it when I look up at the big screen and can see a part of me staring back at me. More than anything, I am still looking for Jimmy Stewart and Jack Lemmon and Billy Wilder in every film I see.
What song gets you out of a bad mood?
What song captures how you feel when you're down?
What song captures what life is all about?
Which song feels like it was written by you?
What song reminds you of someone you've not seen in a long time?
Yesterday I preached about being on time. Today I was late.
We got on the train. Everything was going well, until a woman came over and asked if it goes to the airport.
We said yes.
And then some passenger said no.
And we said what?
And he said no.
Turns out it didn't go to the airport and it didn't go to our film location but it did go to the seaside.
We didn't believe the passenger and stayed on for an extra stop and then realised we should start believing the passenger. The woman looking for the airport told us she had an interview for an airline as a plane designer, which frankly we didn't care that much about but she seemed to be in what us Brits affectionately refer to as 'a pickle'.
So, me, the production assistant and the airplane designer got off the wrong train and went to look for the right one.
I made a joke about how she should've designed a train instead of a plane, but she didn't laugh. It's understandable, as she was late for the biggest interview of her life.
And then I asked her why she didn't fly to the interview.
The production assistant gave me the 'why are you such an idiot' look and then we left the airplane woman alone and went in search of the right train and I'm pretty sure at some point we arrived on location.
1. Cinema has been around less than 200 years. No-one can claim any technique is perfect. The art is still developing.
2. Don't yap on about your technique until you're awesome. Nothing worse than an actor yammering on about some teacher with an unusual name, when they can't even remember their lines.
3. Turn up on time.
4. Don't make diva like demands, you're just an actor, and there is nothing inherently special about that.
5. And when I say 'just an actor' It's not a put down, It's just that It's just a job, a career choice, like anything else.
6. Be in it for the long haul. People want to be cast when they're 24 and pretty but there's nothing interesting about being 24 and pretty.
7. Watch films. No excuses.
8. Be careful not to zone out after three takes. Stay in the game.
9. Get clarity from your director.
10. Make decisions about your character, bring it to the table. A director has the vision but you have the inner life. The more you believe in it, the more a director will leave you alone to work.
11. Be the one actor on set at 3am in a frozen cold field who doesn't moan that It's 3am in a frozen cold field.
12. Find something about yourself that you love and don't let anyone shake it. Start at that very point whenever you feel nervous, unsupported or lost on set.
Main Points: Turn up on time, be in it for the long haul.