I actually find it harder to act in the scenes where there's not much happening, say having a milkshake in the diner. That is far harder to do than straight scenes where there's a drama going on and you have something to do.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I found it more challenging to act in a small scene, especially if it has no dialogue and if it is a close-up with only expressions.
I think it's much harder to have a long dialogue scene than an action scene. An action scene is long, but it's not really hard. It's kind of boring, really. It looks good at the end, but to shoot it, it's not the most exciting thing.
On so many levels, acting in film and TV is so much the sum of its parts, and somewhere in there, there's an alchemical thing that makes something happen or not - that makes something connect or not. Now, of course you want to make work that people see, but the enjoyment I get out of acting is playing characters.
The hardest part of acting is not when I'm acting, It's when I'm not.
I find that the acting's getting easier - with experience, everything is more instinctual.
The idea of acting is something that absolutely repulses me. I just can't do it. I'm terrible at it. I get roped into films every now and then, and it's always a disaster.
The hardest part about acting is realizing it doesn't matter.
I don't find intimate scenes more difficult than other scenes.
The action-movie genre is a very difficult one to get satiated in terms of your acting bits.
The hardest thing about movie acting is that if you're playing a character who changes within the movie, you've got to do that, but you've got to do it out of sequence, because we never have gotten to shoot in sequence, and that's really, really tough.