As an actor, there's very little you can do if people don't want to see you. Just getting yourself into the room to audition is tough.
Portraying as human the people you hear about on the news doing bad things is dangerous. But it's also necessary and important.
I did 'Never Let Me Go,' and there were amazing people on that. Brilliant writer, director, cast. That was quite special.
As an actor, I've just gotten insanely lucky. I quite like being surrounded by lots of different talented people lots of different times a year.
There is this old thing that a lot of people say - that the worst experiences make the best films. I don't subscribe to it. But I've seen it happen.
I think I'm happiest when there are really talented people around.
People always want to ask me about my dad. Which I get because he's a phenomenal actor, and that's for the world, that's out there. But my mother is every bit as impressive and as important for the world as my dad is. It's just that she's not an actor.
People who don't listen make me annoyed. That's the normal stuff, isn't it?
There's this thing that you're not meant to have too many children - for global warming, it's bad. But I know lots of crappy people, and I would rather that good people have lots of kids and outnumber the baddies.
Just because I'm doing 'Star Wars' doesn't mean that'll be the thing that makes people stop me in the street.
I stand to learn more working as an actor with really talented people than I do by directing a feature.
It's hard to get people up and out to shows, but 'The Walworth Farce' has masses of energy and will attract a crowd who don't always come to the theatre, which is great.