It's what you don't see that keeps you on the edge of your seat in any kind of film - leave it to the imagination of the viewer.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I don't want people to sit there and objectively watch the film. I want them to experience it as something that's under their skin, so you try to make the films really tactile.
I have a really difficult time watching myself on film. I literally cower in my seat and cover my face.
When I watch a film I get swept away. I don't really watch the camera.
Once I finish shooting a film, I usually sit on it to see how we can make it better.
You want to keep it in there because you feel like it's yours but to be able to see that sometimes some stuff needs to go and I think it's for the benefit of the film.
When I finish a film, I put it away and I never look at it again.
When you sit on something for so long you can't see beyond it. It's all you can see, so you become locked in it.
If you can't believe a little in what you see on the screen, it's not worth wasting your time on cinema.
I have this thing that, once I finish a movie, I never see it again.
As soon as anybody puts anything on film, it automatically has a point of view, and it's somebody else's point of view, and it's impossible for it to be yours.