And I'm auditioning right now for a movie, and then I have a script that I'm reading right now for a horror film, and I'm meeting for a couple of television shows that I just had yesterday, and pretty much was offered one of them.
I'm just one of those people that if I sit down to watch a horror film, I put my hands over my face and I cry a lot and I don't see half of the film because I'm too upset.
Scream was great for what it was. For a horror film, it was intelligent, it was funny, it took a laugh at itself.
There are a couple of things in there if we're constraining this discussion to horror here.
We could hang around for ten years and nobody would care enough to identify us. Therein lies the horror.
People who sleep around to get roles are frail and scared and most likely without talent. It's their own little horror show that only they can deal with.
I have always had a horror and detestation of poverty.
The true face of smoking is disease, death and horror - not the glamour and sophistication the pushers in the tobacco industry try to portray.
But my problem with fantasy, and horror, and related genres, is that sometimes the problems are illogical.
I had to get used to wearing a mask and wearing a prosthetic and performing with those things while singing and expressing myself through stylized movement, while keeping it as human as possible so the audience could be closer to the horror of the Phantom.
I think I've only done one horror movie, Psycho III. That was a walk in the park compared to a romantic comedy.
Our national drug is alcohol. We tend to regard the use any other drug with special horror.
Frankly, despite my horror of the press, I'd love to rise from the grave every ten years or so and go buy a few newspapers.
This death cult has no reason and is beyond negotiation. This is what makes it so frightening. This is what causes so many to engage in a sort of mental diversion. They don't want to confront this horror. So they rush off in search of more comprehensible things to hate.
I think film had a terrible effect on horror fiction particularly in the 80s, with certain writers turning out stuff as slick and cliched as Hollywood movies.