I've never done anything that I felt was crossing the line for me. But everybody has to make that decision individually. Like, I've never shot heroin to play a heroin addict. I've never turned a trick to play a prostitute. Whatever. You draw the line where you feel it could be harmful.
Ryan took him out of Betty Ford after Redmond wanted to leave because he met a girl there. The girl was a heroin addict. She was the one who introduced him to the stuff.
I don't like heroin, unless you're a jazz musician and then you have to be on it because jazz is the sound of heroin.
In terms of, like, instant relief, canceling plans is like heroin.
The Force deals a lot with the heroin epidemic, which I'm sorry to know people are experiencing in Canada.
There's no psychological barrier anymore that stops a young person or an older person from taking heroin.
People feel they have to live that stereotypical lifestyle in order to be a rock star. You don't have to shoot heroin and act a certain way to be a rock and roll musician.
I snorted heroin once by accident. It was amazing. But kids, don't snort heroin. It's too good.
I've never done heroin or slept with people for money or anything.
Peter Biskind's Easy Riders, Raging Bulls was made all about drugs, when to most of us, that just meant pot and magic mushrooms. He made it seem like we were all shooting heroin into our eyeballs. But that's part of the whole '60s and what it represented: feminism and civil rights and trying to stop the war. Hopefully we're starting to see some of that optimism again, through the excitement around Barack Obama.
Heroin also makes people feel better, but I wouldn't recommend using heroin.
In real life during the last decade of the twentieth century, Rumpelstiltskin would probably get the queen's daughter. He would no doubt addict her to heroin, turn her out as a prostitute, confiscate her earnings, beat her for pleasure, hack her to pieces, and escape justice by claiming that society's intolerance for bad-tempered, evil-minded trolls had driven him temporarily insane.
There are rules in movies. I did a movie playing a bad cop who was a heroin addict but they wouldn't let me smoke in a movie.
I could take on England, but I couldn't take on one heroin user.
Novel writing is like heroin addiction; it takes everything you've got.
I like the glamorous indie rock look, like The Libertines. But you know, without the heroin needle sticking out of my arm.
Telephone message on his manager's answering machine shortly before dying of heroin overdose: I need help bad, man.
I never, never photograph someone getting high to sell clothes. I was called, at some point, the person responsible for "heroin chic". I didn't have anything to do with "heroin chic".
Ros was dead. He had loved heroin more than it loved him. I was shocked beyond imagining; he was the first of my friends to fall.
I tried heroin once and I didn't like it. It frightened me.