I was clear about the fact that my first film should be 'big,' since it's the start of your whole career graph.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Sometimes people say to you that you should try to be in a bigger film, but it's the way it pans out.
Well, I think just the fact that you are making your first film is a huge step.
Some of the smallest things on a smaller film, to me, are greater achievements than on a big film when you have the resources and the time and everything else.
I was always realistic about the fact I wanted to be involved with big films.
What people see is just your career graph and the films you do. But that's a very small aspect of my life.
What I realized is that it doesn't matter how big or small your film is. The actual filmmaking process, the actual storytelling, it's still the same thing. It's still all about creating characters that you like and creating moments that get you excited or get you tense.
I'd always tried not to worry about the size of the role or the size of the film.
I never really thought about myself being in really big movies at all. In fact, I always though I'd do, I don't know, smaller movies is not quite the right word, but more character-oriented, dramatic things. I took myself a little bit seriously.
I think it's important to do smaller films because I think that's where a lot of new things are happening.
It doesn't matter how big or small your film is: you still don't have enough money. You don't have enough time to shoot it.