Most of the movies I saw growing up were viewed as totally disposable, fine for quick consumption, but they have survived 50 years and are still growing.
I realized this is what God has dealt me, and I should be thankful considering all that's happened to me in my life, but MS caused the movies to stop - stop dead - and I miss it.
Even when I was a little kid, I always said I would be in the movies one day, and damned if I didn't make it.
Movies are movies, and I don't think any of them are going to hurt the moral fiber of America and all that nonsense.
I can't get my head around the fact that the technology of the first two movies, which are forty years prior to Star Wars, is so much better than any technology they had in Star Wars!
I didn't see a ton of movies growing up.
The next thing I knew, I was out of the service and making movies again. My first picture was called, GI Blues. I thought I was still in the army.
Those movies sure got me into a rut.
Later on they send me to Hollywood. To make movies. It was all new to me. I was only 21 years old.
Too much TV hurts movies.
When I was a boy, I always saw myself as a hero in comic books and in movies. I grew up believing this dream.
I sure lost my musical direction in Hollywood. My songs were the same conveyer belt mass production, just like most of my movies were.
I don't want to do anything like Can't Hardly Wait, I don't want to do anything like Scream. I saw all those movies, and they were good, but they're just not what I want to do.
I would be very happy doing movies. I love to work and I think I'm a little different.
I can't say that I've made the transition to movies.