I'm eager to do movies of different genres. I would love to not be confined by genre and do a lot of different things.
To me genres were always an imaginary things, they're just marketing channels.
I am a movie fan across the board, though, so if a movie is well done then I love it and it does not really matter what the genre is.
Genre is a bookstore problem, not a literary problem.
I've always found that whatever you say about indie rock, it is the most inclusive genre or title for anything. It doesn't pin you down too much, like other labels would. It's just newer, it has less baggage.
I've never been able to control a first-person shooter, but as soon as I used the Revolution controller, I found it very easy to control the game. So, I think that's a genre that's particularly well suited for the controller.
I'm a fantasy writer. I don't do SF. This is important to me. If you're not clear on what genre you're in, everything gets muddled, and it's hard to know which rules you're breaking.
I am completely open to doing a romantic comedy, but I will never do something just for the sake of doing a specific genre or because it's the time or place to do a different type of movie. I think that would be a huge mistake.
I always wanted to do a movie that deals with America's horrific past with slavery, but the way I wanted to deal with it is - as opposed to doing it as a huge historical movie with a capital H - I thought it could be better if it was wrapped up in genre.
I never excluded any genre on my first record.
I do genre films because I like them, or because I need the money.
I'm looking for stories that make me sit up and take notice. For engagement with language and style in ways that the genre doesn't see enough of.
The only genre I have any problem with is musicals, but that's just my own tastes it's nothing to do with the films.
I love seeing when actors go from one genre to the next because I feel like most of them can pull it off.
Crime fiction is a genre for writing stories about people - about conflict, about guilt, about passion, about the human condition.
The spy genre is something I loved. It also extends to the bad guy because I think, to me, what I love the most about the spy genre is when you have a great bad guy. What makes a great bad guy, to me, is the logic. What he's about has to make sense to me, that if I was in his shoes, yeah, right, that makes sense.
I am a sinner. This is the most accurate definition. It is not a figure of speech, a literary genre. I am a sinner.
It's just cool to do something different and branch out and dabble in different genres.
When I was in college, I had a friend who was an artist and her theory was that all the best art in the world is funnysad. That was her favorite genre. Funnysad are probably my two favorite tones.
I like the Western genre, I think it's uniquely American.