Filming is a very adult world, and you need to be with people your own age.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Having to go back and forth between school and filming would sometimes be frustrating because I loved school. It was my chance to be around other people my age. But when you're leaving school to go to a set that's filled with kids your age, then it's fine.
As an adult, there are technical aspects of filmmaking you understand, like having to pick up a cup on the same line every time.
When you grow up on film, people sometimes have difficulties accepting the fact that you are growing up. They always imagine you younger.
When you're younger, and you do your first or second film, you want to show everyone what you can do.
I want to play a role of a 24-year-old woman, not 17-year-old girls. So I have picked a couple of films like 'Butter' to show that. And it's perfectly fine not to do anything for a year if I don't find the right thing.
I make films for the 16-year-old in myself sometimes.
I'm not interested in making a $60-million studio film with a bunch of 24-year-olds telling me what to do.
This is an age where you could put anything on YouTube; people can make films on their own.
Perhaps it sounds ridiculous, but the best thing that young filmmakers should do is to get hold of a camera and some film and make a movie of any kind at all.
At a very young age I was allowed to go into the cinema and watch adult films.