I had travelled pretty widely around the world even before then, so I knew where to go to film wildlife.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
All I really wanted to do was wildlife photography.
I learned to be a hot-air balloon pilot to take tourists over the Masai Mara Reserve in order to earn some money and finance the work I was doing with my wife, Anne. We were studying the life of a family of lions for more than two years. Taking pictures was a way to capture information we could not put in words.
Growing up, I spent a lot of time on film sets all over the world.
I feel like I have lived all over the world since I get to go everywhere to film.
I knew from the first moment I picked up a camera, on my first school assignment, what I wanted to do for the rest of my life. I was going to find a way to travel the world and tell the stories of the people I met through photographs.
I grew up in a family of filmmakers, so I always wanted to make films about animals, especially comical films. Something about animals amuses me. And they have a great mystery. It's the same mystique some people might feel looking at the stars or the ocean.
I really got into filmmaking through photography.
I was going to go to a four-year college and be an anthropologist or to an art school and be an illustrator when a friend convinced me to learn photography at the University of Southern California. Little did I know it was a school that taught you how to make movies! It had never occurred to me that I'd ever have any interest in filmmaking.
I stopped making films to look after animals.
I grew up in the countryside, and I was obsessed with horses and wildlife.
No opposing quotes found.