In 'Winter's Bone,' it's literally the director and the camera operator. That's it. Just a super-small Kubrick crew. You know what I mean? Like, 8 people.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The director is the only person on the set who has seen the film. Your job as a director is to show up every day and know where everything will fit into the film.
A director should cast a person who fits into their script.
I believe that as a writer and a director, you're only providing the skeleton of a character, and you're hiring actors to fill it out.
As a director, you see something in someone; you know it's there, you just got to go get it. You do that with any actor. That's your job.
As an actor, you're in the hands of producers and directors. It's important to find out who you're working with.
As an actor... at some point you've got to forget that the crew's there in order to do your job.
I know every actor says this, but the people behind the camera are great. They always have answers.
So many people are called but few serve as actors, you know what I mean?
Everyone who appears in a scene gets paid.
I know this sounds kind of crazy, but I think we're all actors.
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