Life is like a dogsled team. If you ain't the lead dog, the scenery never changes.
How dear to this heart are the scenes of my childhood, when fond recollection presents them to view.
The way I navigate scenes is through what I perceive to be the emotional truth of the character what he wants from moment to moment.
The best scene is the last great scene I did.
We have the best technical know-how on the scene and I believe the investigation will bring results as soon as possible.
We've been absent from the scene for so long now - many people in syria don't know us much.
Bush already gave obscene tax breaks to people like me and Warren Buffet, and we are saying it's not fair.
If you do a scene the right way, you can go home at the end of the day and really feel like you accomplished something.
Obscene salaries send the wrong message through a company.
Intimate scenes or a kiss is a very technical aspect of filmmaking. It is extremely mechanical.
We've rewritten entire scenes and had them animated twelve hours before the show goes on the air. It's not fun.
The bomb squad is on scene and they are trying to determine the nature of the threat.
I had one scene in 'Invisible' with 12 actors delivering dialog at the same time.
My stay in Munich was the scene of my complete liberation.
I enjoy setting the scene and coming up with interesting frames. 'True Detective' was a very hands-on set.
I love the food scene in New York.
I prefer love scenes to be shot up close with a lot of focus on eyes and mouths. Otherwise it can feel uncomfortable and voyeuristic.
When I'm on a set, and I'm in between a scene or on a plane waiting, I read Twitter and I love it.
Every change of scene requires new expositions, descriptions, explanations.
I love to share in a scene - I'd rather share than be alone.
The club scene is terrible.
I dreaded the dance scene in 'Love Actually' more than having my teeth extracted.
Love scenes are extremely difficult. You're always within a millimeter of sentimentality and 'yuck.'
I don't like to over-intellectualize scenes that are working. I tend to think when you do that you may lose it.
The drag scene in the U.K. Is super fierce!
One scene is enough for a good actor to leave his mark in any film.
I enjoy scenes in films, which do not have the pressure of the story so much... And it flows. I've tried to go in that direction.
Even in the big movies, if the scenes are very big, I'm not fond of them as much as I'm fond of small actor scenes.
My issue in the past with nudity was that these scenes had been written solely for box office draw.
The fight scenes in 'The World's End' have a certain balletic quality to them.