And later I thought, I can't think how anyone can become a director without learning the craft of cinematography.
Movies are not scripts - movies are films; they're not books, they're not the theatre.
The great difference between screen acting and theatre acting is that screen acting is about reacting - 75% of the time, great screen actors are great reactors.
Some people are very lucky, and have the story in their heads. I've never storyboarded anything. I like the idea of chance. What makes God laugh is people who make plans.
Marketing is a very good thing, but it shouldn't control everything. It should be the tool, not that which dictates.
In life, we all learn from everyone.
Fear has many faces.
Children's finger-painting came under the arts, but movies didn't.
The rules are learnt in order to be broken, but if you don't know them, then something is missing.
Any change in form produces a fear of change, and that has accelerated. Marketing is the death of invention, because marketing deals with the familiar.
But in marketing, the familiar is everything, and that is controlled by the studio. That is reaching its apogee now.
They think something's gone wrong, but in Don't Look Now, for instance, one scene was made by a mistake. It's the scene where Donald Sutherland goes to look for the policeman who's investigating the two women.
Years ago I had a house in Sussex, it was like Arcadia, with an old Victorian bridge, a pond and the Downs.
You make the movie through the cinematography - it sounds quite a simple idea, but it was like a huge revelation to me.
There was a village watercolour society and they'd come and paint in my field. I watched them from the window, the way they would struggle this way and that to find the perfect moment. God has made every angle on that beautiful, and I felt that tremendously.