Actors always have opinions.
At my age, I grow tired of people.
Bad Boys II has knocked everyone's socks off.
Good actors are a dime a dozen, but I want actors that are gonna be part of my team and collaborative.
I don't like directors that just say, Stand there and now do this.
I just want to do this for the rest of my days. Wear my pajamas, and I don't have to put on a hairpiece anymore.
I love television. I don't like network television. I think it's just too primitive, I think it's a thing of the past.
I think one of the geniuses of Bound and The Matrix and Memento is the complete collaboration of the effort. There were no rotten apples.
I think we're going to see the day where commercialized television will not exist anymore, it's going to be vertically integrated.
I wanted to play a good guy after doing this lunatic on The Sopranos for two years. And then they did the sequel to Bad Boys, where I get to play the barking captain again.
I was working at Warner's and I went on Stage 16, which is the largest stage in the world. It's the water stage.
I've been on jobs where there's that one actor who is just a miserable, miserable no-good, dirty bastard, and it just turns the whole process sour.
I've been saying in the press that being a NY Post investigator reporter is an oxymoron.
I've been so good in so many movies that nobody saw.
I've been very successful doing voices in movies. I did Olive, the Other Reindeer, with Drew Barrymore, and I did Cats and Dogs. My children came to some of the sessions.
I've worked with Steven Spielberg three times. I'm proud to say that I'm one of those actors that continues to get hired by the same directors.
Imagination takes over and it's explained to you by the vision of the director. And then you take a leap of faith.
In private some critics have come up to me afterwards and told me they honestly enjoyed the movie. Then they'd tell me that they're still going to have to write it up negatively.
It's all about people. It's all about the subjectivity of what people love.
It's always been my humble description that the best roles in a story are the antagonist, the protagonist and the victim.
It's such a luxury to be able to be happy about going to work in the morning.
Let's face it, 80 percent of the work I do my kids can't see.
Living in the projects helped me with this role.
One thing that's great about being a character actor is that a movie doesn't rest on your shoulders. If it bombs, it won't hurt my career.
That's another reason I did Daredevil: I didn't get killed off in it.
The amateur porn business makes $11 billion a year. They don't get bad reviews.
The camera looks into your soul.
The greatest leading man, in my opinion, will always be Cary Grant.
The Moguls is a story about guys that have all grown up together and are now in their late 40s, early 50s.
There aren't any small parts, only small paychecks.
They actually bought me for Daredevil 2, but they have to exercise the option.
They've been talking about Pi, which I haven't seen, they've been comparing it to Usual Suspects, Sixth Sense, and Fight Club, and I didn't see that either.
Twelve to 15 years of acting school, and I am being a bird.
We have to promote a movie. It's just extraordinary that everybody I'm talkin' to loves this movie.
We should do another 10 Bad Boys movies. I could come in in one of those electric wheelchairs, like Peter Sellers in Dr Strangelove, just shouting away.
What the hell did I do in the 80's? Midnight Run. A perfect movie. Just a perfect movie.
When I got the script for Memento, I read it and I got killed off on page one and I fired my agent.
When I interview somebody, I look at their resume to see what they've done, who they've worked with, and how many times. If they've gotten repeat work. Those are the kinds of actors I want to hire.
When we were making The Fugitive, we all thought it was going to bomb.
When you work for Bruckheimer, you don't get it any better. He's the ultimate producer. I've had the good fortune of working with some great producers over the years.
Who owns the NY Post? 20th Century Fox. Talk about vertical integration.
You'll never see me in the red leather. I don't have the chin for it.