I don’t like to talk about myself that much.
I lost touch with my son in terms of advice early on. Maybe it had to do with being gone so much, doing location films when he was at an age where he needed support and guidance.
I left home when I was 16 because I was looking for adventure.
I have trouble with direction, because I have trouble with authority. I was not a good Marine.
I don’t see myself as a violent guy.
Dysfunctional families have sired a number of pretty good actors.
It really costs me a lot emotionally to watch myself on-screen. I think of myself, and feel like I’m quite young, and then I look at this old man with the baggy chins and the tired eyes and the receding hairline and all that.
Five players on the floor functioning as a single unit: team, team, team-no one more important than the other.
I was trained to be an actor, not a star.
If you look at yourself as a star, you’ve already lost something in the portrayal of any human being.
If I start to become a star, I’ll lose contact with the normal guys I play best.
That’s the great thing about plankton. It pretty much keeps to itself.
Like a duck on the pond. On the surface everything looks calm, but beneath the water those little feet are churning a mile a minute.
I don’t trust air I can’t see.
Hollywood loves to typecast, and I guess they saw me as a violent guy.
You go through stages in your career that you feel very good about yourself. Then you feel awful, like, ‘Why didn’t I choose something else?’ But overall I’m pretty satisfied that I made the right choice when I decided to be an actor.
Once, I optioned a novel and tried to do a screenplay on it, which was great fun, but I was too respectful. I was only 100 pages into the novel and I had about 90 pages of movie script going. I realized I had a lot to learn.
Honesty isn’t enough for me. That becomes very boring. If you can convince people what you’re doing is real and it’s also bigger than life – that’s exciting.
I went in the Marines when I was 16. I spent four and a half years in the Marines and then came right to New York to be an actor. And then seven years later, I got my first job.
I write in the morning from about eight till noon, and sometimes again a bit in the afternoon. In the morning I start off by going over what I had done the previous day, which my wife has happily typed up for me.