I never went to a John Wayne movie to find a philosophy to live by or to absorb a profound message. I went for the simple pleasure of spending a couple of hours seeing the bad guys lose.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
John Wayne was a consummate gentleman. Bigger than life.
John Wayne treated me fine, but that macho stuff turns me off. It's not real.
I've seen all the Batman movies in the theater opening weekend. I was a big Batman fan, definitely.
I've seen John Wayne's 'True Grit' about 10 times.
I got to do a whole slew of TV movies playing the bad guy, including an episode of Smallville. That would never have happened if I hadn't done the Stand.
No movie can claim to be a work of philosophy. They fulfill a totally different need in people.
John Wayne never ever disappointed his fans, because he was a cowboy.
I came into acting with that sort of dull, meet-with-triumph-and-disaster-the-same philosophy and it's been the right one for me.
Although it wasn't that easy to do, it was wonderful working with John Wayne.
I remember leaving the first 'Matrix' movie feeling completely radicalized, completely changed. I think we all, from our ordinary lives, like to think about putting ourselves into these extraordinary situations and wonder how we'd respond.