First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"13th Warrior, The"
"14 Carrot Rabbit"
"20th Century Women"
"22 vs. Earth"
"27 Dresses"
"28 Days Later"
"28 Weeks Later"
"30 Days of Night"
"40 Year-Old Virgin, The"
"50 First Dates"
"50/50 (2011)"
"400 Blows, The"
"(500) Days of Summer"
"2001: A Space Odyssey"
"2010: The Year We Make Contact"
"3000 Miles to Graceland"
"20,000 Leagues Under the Sea"
"5,000 Fingers of Dr. T, The"
"About Last Night..."
"About Schmidt"
"About Time"
"Abominable"
"Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter"
"Absence of Malice"
"Absolute Power"
"Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls"
"Ace Ventura: Pet Detective"
"Accused, The (1988)"
"Adam's Rib"
"Accidental Tourist, The"
"Act of Valor"
"Across the Universe"
"3 Ninjas Kick Back"
"A director must be a policeman, a midwife, a psychoanalyst, a sycophant and a bastard.”"
"I think it’s important as a filmmaker, as any person working in the arts, that you’ve got to try new stuff and challenge yourself and take chances."
"Film is incredibly democratic and accessible, it’s probably the best option if you actually want to change the world, not just re-decorate it."
"If there’s specific resistance to women making movies, I just choose to ignore that as an obstacle for two reasons: I can’t change my gender, and I refuse to stop making movies. It's irrelevant who or what directed a movie, the important thing is that you either respond to it or you don't. There should be more women directing; I think there's just not the awareness that it's really possible. It is."
"I was talking to a friend about it recently and I told him that the thing about making that film that upset me most was how cruel Lars is to the woman he is working with. Not that I can't take it, because I'm pretty tough and completely capable of defending myself, but because my ideals of the ultimate creator were shattered. And my friend said "What did you expect? All major directors are "sexist", a maker is not necessarily an expert in human rights or female/male equality! My answer was that you can take quite sexist film directors like Woody Allen or Stanley Kubrick and still they are the one that provide the soul to their movies. In Lars von Trier's case it is not so and he knows it. He needs a female to provide his work soul. And he envies them and hates them for it. So he has to destroy them during the filming. And hide the evidence. What saves him as an artist, though, is that he is so painfully honest that even though he will manage to cover up his crime in the "real" world (he is a genius to set things up that everybody thinks it is just his female-actress-at-the-moment imagination, that she is just hysterical or pre-menstrual), his films become a documentation of this "soul-robbery". Breaking the Waves is the clearest example of that."
"Today, there's a general numbing of the audience. There's too much murder and killing. You make people insensitive by showing it all the time. The body count in pictures is huge. It numbs the audience into thinking it's not so terrible. Back in the '70s, I asked Orson Welles what he thought was happening to pictures, and he said, "We're brutalizing the audience. We're going to end up like the Roman circus, live at the Coliseum." The respect for human life seems to be eroding."
"My movie is born first in my head, dies on paper; is resuscitated by the living persons and real objects I use, which are killed on film but, placed in a certain order and projected on to a screen, come to life again like flowers in water."
"One would think that making a film is an ; you're building this—it's not, it's . The best metaphor I know of is we make in [] and it takes forty gallons of sap to make one gallon of maple syrup. And that's what the process is."
"Pick up a camera. Shoot something. No matter how small, no matter how cheesy, no matter whether your friends and your sister star in it. Put your name on it as director. Now you’re a director. Everything after that you’re just negotiating your budget and your fee."
"There are no rules in filmmaking. Only sins. And the cardinal sin is dullness."
"All I Need to Make a Comedy is a Park, a Policeman and a Pretty Girl."
"In France I am an autier In England, I’m a horror movie director. In Germany, I’m a filmmaker. In the US, I’m a bum."
"We don’t make movies to make money, we make money to make more movies"
"First cuts are a bitch for a director, because it’s been so many months and you put your trust in your editor and you’re going to see your film assembled for the first time. You look at it and go, This is terrible. I hate it."
"Kenji Mizoguchi is to the cinema what Bach is to music, Cervantes is to literature, Shakespeare is to theatre, Titian is to painting: the very greatest."
"The foreign directors are always fumbling about in obscurity, and the critics are always writing about the juxtaposition of black and white and the existential dilemma and all that shit, to disguise the fact that they don't understand the first damn thing about it either."
"A story [in a film] should have a beginning, a middle and an end… but not necessarily in that order."