A film actor is just a victim of directors and editors.
I don't look at film that closely about my mechanics of where's my elbow at.
I scored a movie called 'Endangered Species'. I worked on another movie called 'Staying Alive'. A German film called 'Fire and Ice'.
The calibre of TV's changing. It's becoming much more epic. To rival film, definitely.
If 'Bhoot' was called 'Man Ke Rishte,' no one would be interested. The title is a very essential part of a film. It subconsciously prepares the audience as to what they can expect.
Everytime I get offered theatre I get offered a film role too.
I want to make a film about a factory worker.
Having worked in Hindi, Telugu, and Tamil film industries, I've been lucky to have travelled far and wide for shoots.
Unless it's a flat-out farce, an actor can't play comedy on film.
'Fargo' was the turnaround for me, in terms of film, because it was a part; it wasn't a line.
I really want to do a western film. It's one of my favorite movie genres of all time.
I started off writing TV adverts. I saw those as rehearsals for a feature film.
My dream would be producing, maybe directing - definitely not writing - one feature film.
A feature film is twenty-four lies per second.
I want to direct a feature film. Horror is my main genre.
I've had plenty of lessons about film acting and theatre acting.
The difference - the fundamental difference between theater acting and film acting is that film acting is disjunctive.
The foundation for film acting is stage acting.
I've learnt that there's acting for film, acting for theatre, and acting for an audition.
TV artistes are far more professional and dedicated compared to film actors.