When you take on a project, you have to be certain that you can make the best version of whatever it is you're given.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
When you start a new project, you wonder whether it's the right choice.
Every project has to stand on its own. It's a different identity within each project, and I feel like that's the way it should be.
Every time you do a project, you learn something new.
Whenever I start a project, I have a broad range of possibilities.
Some projects go as you hope or imagine, and some change or reveal themselves in a different way; it depends.
I do pick my projects very meticulously. I want my projects to be meaningful.
Certain projects find you at the right time.
But I also think that the more you reason collectively about what the project should be at the beginning of the process, the more you can improvise later.
You can't control the quality of projects that are coming to you, so if you get several in a row that are quality, you take them.
When you go into projects, you can't look at it as limited; you have to dive into it wholeheartedly to be true to the writer's vision.