Nowadays it seems more and more like the 'business' in 'show business' is underlined, and there are campaigns, and it's all part of getting people in to see the movies.
Nowadays, in the contract that actors sign, you have to agree that you're going to do a certain amount of publicity-the hard part they don't pay you for.
I don't really consider myself one of those actors who takes his work home with him.
Any role that big is going to be a challenge for any actor, but for an actor of a young age, it's going to be even tougher.
It gives me more breadth as an actor and as an artist to not be pigeonholed.
As you become famous you lose some of your anonymity, which is wonderful for an actor to have because you can observe people and also people don't have such a strong sense of who you are and that sort of thing.
I'd maybe done about 12 movies when I decided that this was what I was going to do.
Basically, one of the hardest things about being an actor is getting your first break. I'm a product of nepotism. The doors were open to me. I'd done several movies before I decided what I wanted to do.
I don't have one movie that is my favorite, I have about 25-30 favorites.
I like to think of myself as a character actor, though there's some redundancy in that.
Unlike a lot of actors, my father encouraged all his kids to go into show business.
I'm used to watching old movies of myself.
I hate it when there's a good movie, someone overhypes it and I'm disappointed that I don't like it more.
Movies are very subjective.
Movies are like magic tricks.
Fame really works against actors, in a way, because our anonymity is a wonderful thing for us.