It's a standard staple in Japanese cinema to cut somebody's arm off and have red water hoses for veins, spraying blood everywhere.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Chemists employed by the police can do remarkable things with blood. They can weave it into a rope to hang a man.
The logistics of blood is something that I didn't even understood as a first-time director. Not just actors and make-up, but once a set gets bloody, you don't un-blood it. Once something gets bloody, you either rebuild the set, or you just don't get the shot.
I don't see on television the kind of blood and guts and body parts blown apart that maybe you're referring to, but it certainly is in that BATMAN feature and I found it very offensive.
I love to take actors to a place where they open a vein. That's the job. The key is that I make it safe for them to open the vein.
It's in my blood to perform.
I don't have any plugs or tucks but people do what they want. I look at it as mutilation.
I recognize the fact that I don't have one single drop of Japanese blood in my body. But I've always felt half-Japanese at heart.
What atonement is there for blood spilt upon the earth?
A pint of sweat, saves a gallon of blood.
I've got Disney blood running through my veins.