'How to Survive a Plague' is history-telling at its best. It's a film I'll show my two children, now toddlers, when they are old enough to understand. It's a movie that I cannot forget.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
At a certain point in one's career, it's really wonderful when your child turns around and goes, 'Oh my God, Mommy, you have to be in that film. My friends are going to die.'
The thing that I really love about film is that it is with you forever - it goes to your children, and they get to see it again and again and have it forever.
'What Doesn't Kill You' is a really great movie that was little seen but, I think, is one of my personal favorites.
It's funny how it usually works out that I end up dying. It sort of works out, because by the time I die, I'm usually tired of working on that particular movie, so I look forward to it.
I like a film that makes the audience feel like they are in the middle of life as it is moving, and in a way, they are catching up. They are thrown into things.
I like a little movie I did in the early nineties called 'Mortal Thoughts.' The part was hardly written, but I learned a lot making it. No one remembers it.
Ah, 'The Departed' is really good.
To be fair, I don't think it's a plague to say I have the misfortune of making movies for a living.
Growing up I always loved films that transport you to another world and has things you never see in every day life.
Film has to describe and show.
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