I find I clash sometimes with people who like to plan things and book you in for lunch. I'd rather someone call me up, say: 'Are you free tonight and d'you wanna go to the roller-disco? Or play pool?'
Perhaps misguidedly, I always admire the people who are so polished.
Especially in Britain, people want to limit you.
You just never know who's going to have chemistry. You can put two of the sexiest people in the world together, and they could be completely flat.
I'd like people to get a sense of who I am, yet I want to keep my privacy, too.
When the eyes are on you for the first time, you can't believe that people aren't criticising you.
Sometimes it irks when people come up in the street and say, 'Oh I'm a huge James Bond fan' - when you obviously want them to be a fan of your work in particular.
It's a great romantic story with very real people in it and I think it is open to so many interpretations like any great bit of literature.
I'm probably not going to play a junkie and that's OK because there are other people who will do it better.
I always think that the people who have the hardest time in the spotlight are the people who have unearned fame, like the girlfriends of people who are famous or people who become figures of attention, not through their own merit.