Cinema seats make people lazy. They expect to be given all the information. But for me, question marks are the punctuation of life.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Whenever we start a new TV series, there's also a lot of question marks, and part of that is finding who you are.
The great thing about books is that you can end with a question mark.
I'd say there are two kinds of theater: one you end with an answer, one you end with a question.
I think it's insulting to an audience to make them sit and watch a film and then give them a message in one sentence.
To me, what is important in the theater is that we don't want to make a conclusion. We don't want to make a statement, don't want to say what something is. We want to ask, 'What is it?'
I don't think it's the job of filmmakers to give anybody answers. I do think, though, that a good film makes you ask questions of yourself as you leave the theatre.
T.V.'s weird because it's both the greatest gig as an actor potentially because it can be all this work for all this time, but there are so many question marks at every stage of the process.
Celebrity is absolutely preposterous. Entertainment seems to be inflating. It used to be the punctuation to your life, a film or a novel or a play, a way of celebrating a good week or month. Now it feels as if it's all punctuation.
I found a great many pieces of punctuation and typography lying around dormant when I came along - and I must say I had a good time using them.
For me, art is supposed to be a question mark.