I think I've been lucky, being my frequent appearances on Court TV have brought to me another level than just the actor guy.
I think you end up doing the stuff you were supposed to do at the time you were supposed to do it.
It's a very smart and heartfelt movie and that's why, I think, we're all drawn to it. We really showed up for this with this collective idea that it was really ambitious, but we felt we all really had something to gain from it.
But I think Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang really got that thing where, if a movie reads really funny and then has some dramatic or violent or sinister stuff in it, you can't forget that primarily it has to be even funnier than you read it or that other stuff doesn't work.
The lesson is that you can still make mistakes and be forgiven.
Look, even bad years are pretty good years I think.
I think life changes every year. This is just a little more comfortable.
I've always been a fella who put most of my eggs in one basket and then take a dump in the basket but I really don't know.
Nothing's a break for me. Not even the breaks are breaks.
I think that the power is the principle. The principle of moving forward, as though you have the confidence to move forward, eventually gives you confidence when you look back and see what you've done.
I read the script for Wonder Boys, and I said that was almost perfect, it was so classy, cool and funny. It's a really specific thing. We stuck to it, it turned out good and a lot of people liked it.
With a terrible script you hustle and try to make it better. But with a good script it can be trouble because you rest on your laurels, so to speak, you think it's going to translate easily.
I've always just shown up and tried to figure out what's for lunch and am I going to get to play some racquetball that night.
I know very little about acting. I'm just an incredibly gifted faker.
I'm not 40 yet. I wouldn't even bother comparing myself to Chaplin.
When you have a good script you're almost in more trouble than when you have a terrible script.
I loved it, it's such fun. I like that people are seeing it and then talking about it. Like when I took my son and his friends to see Napoleon Dynamite last year, we spent the next six weeks trying to explain it.
If you're doing a drama that has some comedic elements you can't forget that it's primarily a very serious film that has some light relief.
But I will agree that I think that things happen with people in relationships, that you might have been able to enjoy Morocco, say, if you weren't getting out of a bad marriage. You know what I mean?
The onus is mostly on the director, and the people developing it and the producers and then the cast and crew and everyone else.
Certain characters are real tough, intricate and multi-faceted, but it's really confidence building when it's your words being written.
It's a perfect fit. The way Shane thinks and writes is the way I talk.
(It's) like I've got a shotgun in my mouth, with my finger on the trigger, and I like the taste of gun metal.