I would love to do some kind of mystery movie, or an action flick, something with that combination.
History buffs expect historical background in historical fiction. Mystery readers expect forensics and police procedure in crime fiction. Westerns - gasp - describe the West. Techno-thriller readers expect to learn something about technology from their fiction.
Americans have perfected the art of reducing complicated truths into formulas and products. We're desperate for instant, visible, measurable ways of knowing God, instead of trusting that it's complicated and a mystery.
'Fringe' is one of my favorite television shows, from its inception. I absolutely love all of the science fiction of it, the mystery of it, and the science in it.
It's easy to get tired of religious fundamentalists. They're such a bore. They have no sense of mystery. It's a drag, man.
I think the media made Manson, turned him into some larger than life figure and surrounded him with mystery and some shady glamour.
Godliness, as well as the doctrine of our faith, is a mystery.
It's easier to see in someone else, another actor, how they kind of disappear and then this other persona appears. A great actor is a thing of mystery.
You can start with a great director and great actors and have a great script - and it still just doesn't work. It's kind of a mystery how that happens.
From the wrestling of his own soul with the great enemy, comes that depth and mystery which startles us in Hamlet.
The greatest writers of this age... are aware of the mystery of our existence.
I hope I have helped to raise the profile of science and to show that physics is not a mystery but can be understood by ordinary people.
The thing about being a mystery writer, what marks a mystery writer out from a chick lit author or historical fiction writer, is that you always find a mystery in every situation.
The horrid mystery hanging over us in this house gets into my head like liquor, and makes me wild.
Every branch of human knowledge, if traced up to its source and final principles, vanishes into mystery.
Thomas Pynchon surely inaugurated or crystallized a new genre in 1963 when he published 'V.' The seriocomic mystery or thriller with one foot set in the present and one in various historical eras received its postmodern baptism from Pynchon.
Although the dream is a very strange phenomenon and an inexplicable mystery, far more inexplicable is the mystery and aspect our minds confer on certain objects and aspects of life.
I've been so lucky to do different things. The world in which 'Westworld' takes place is so unique and bizarre, and it's really interesting to explore that whole universe with the language and brutality going on there. With 'Inferno,' there's the Dan Brown mystery.
Whatever hysteria exists is inflamed by mystery, suspicion and secrecy. Hard and exact facts will cool it.
Often the hands will solve a mystery that the intellect has struggled with in vain.