“I shot a lot of commercials and sometimes I enjoy the commercial shooting and sometimes I really hate it, but in thirty seconds or one minute, you can make some remarkable work shooting in one or two or three days.” TwoSometimesHateThreeEnjoyMinutesShotsShootingThirtyRemarkableSecondsOne Minute Author:Vilmos Zsigmond
“The important bit for an actor is the actual shooting of it, because the minute the shoot ends, it's got nothing to do with you anymore.” ImportantEndsActorsBitsMinutesShooting Author:Mark Strong
“The last two days of shooting ('Harper's Island') was probably the most hardcore, the coldest anyone has ever been. It was like your head was freezing, and my motivation for most scenes was, 'The minute this scene is over, I'm heading straight over to that heater to get warm.'” TwoLastsMotivationMinutesLike YouSceneWarmShootingIslandsHeadingsTwo DaysHardcoreFreezingHarper Author:Elaine Cassidy
“[Fringe] was just about doing the job, or trying to do the job, properly. It was never a job that you could rest on your laurels. It was a very challenging 43 minutes of television that we were shooting, every week.” TryingJobsChallengesWeekMinutesTelevisionShootingFringeLaurels Author:John Noble
“Whenever I'm not shooting, I'm in the editing room with my footage. While the crew is taking 15 minutes to an hour to set up the next shot, I'm behind the Avid, putting the flick together.” TogetherNextHoursRoomsBehindsMinutesShotsShootingEditingCrewAvid Author:Kevin Smith
“One of the biggest things for me was driving two hours to the location everyday, and then having to lug out two carts of equipment alone, and I always had to consider - I was shooting on a beach - I'm like, "Okay, bring out the props first that no one will steal," because I have to leave it unattended for a couple minutes while I grab my second cart of things.” FirstsTwoHoursMinutesCoupleOkayEverydayDrivingStealingBeachShootingLocationEquipmentPropsCarts Author:Kirsten Lepore
“When I do a film, the days before or the night before, I throw up. Sometimes it's just in my mouth and I swallow it back, but sometimes it's real. Whatever it is, it's hard. I don't do the first five or ten minutes of my character's appearance in a movie until the middle of the shooting schedule because I don't want him to be defined by my nervousness. So, we do the middle of the picture first.” WantFirstsRealSometimesHardCharacterFilmNightFiveMiddleMinutesTenMouthsAppearanceDefinedShootingSchedulesWant HimNervousness Author:Donald Sutherland