I don't consider success doing a show for 30 years; I'm sorry. To me, you're successful when you graduate from something. I did a series, I did a talk show, I did movies, I replaced Mickey Rooney on Broadway in Sugar Babies. You understand?
I would love to work in international movies just because the talent all around the world is great. There's a lot of good talent and the audience base is bigger.
I would say the film world has stopped operating as one. We have divided it into Hindi movies, Bengali movies, Tamil movies and so on. Earlier, there was only one channel and we all knew what was going on. Today, it is hard to keep track of programmes due to the advent of regional channels.
Emmerich knows how to do "big", but the trick is in making it (movies) both big and fun.
There are no “old” movies-only movies you have already seen and ones you haven't.
One of the big things that we wanted to do was trying to kick out a car window as you're driving after it's been shattered obstructing your view. I mean, that's - I can't count how many movies I've seen that in, and we just thought, you know, like, it could be funny if it just kind of goes wrong and this foot just kind of punctures through the window and gets stuck.
There's only one thing that can kill the movies, and that's education.
There was a gap of seven years between the first and second Dracula movies. In the second one as everybody knows, I didn't speak, because I said I couldn't say the lines.
I think there have been so many documentaries about pop stars, made by pop stars. It's a new phenomenon. People making these movies where they praise themselves and show their own weaknesses. it's all designed to make you love them even more.
I had always taken photos - always, always taken photos, made movies.
I've done four movies. I've done seven albums. So I feel like music has always been a part of my life; acting is something I'm learning.
My older movies, I find easier to watch.