Top 27 Quotes & Sayings by Brady Corbet

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American actor Brady Corbet.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Brady Corbet

Brady James Monson Corbet is an American actor and filmmaker. Corbet is known for playing Mason Freeland in the film Thirteen, Brian Lackey in the film Mysterious Skin, Alan Tracy in the 2004 film Thunderbirds, and Peter in the 2007 film Funny Games. He has made guest appearances on many television shows. He made his feature film directorial debut with The Childhood of a Leader and won Best Debut film and Best Director award at 72nd Venice International Film Festival.

I don't think that there's anything that we shouldn't be allowed to photograph, really, unless there's something that's really deeply harmful to the subject in the photograph.
It's only the filmmaker. The script is really, really second. And there's a huge gap between filmmaker and script for me. I almost don't care about the story that they're telling; I really only care about who wants to tell it.
I was watching Orson Welles and Jean Vigo films at a ridiculously young age. — © Brady Corbet
I was watching Orson Welles and Jean Vigo films at a ridiculously young age.
I realized that work doesn't beget work. Good work begets work. So I got a lot more patient and stopped worrying about working all the time.
After working for a while, I realized that acting was only satisfying about 30 percent of what interested me about the filmmaking process. Somewhere around age seventeen, I started to realize that if I'm very particular about the people I work with, then I can have the best sort of master class possible.
I know that I'm very comfortable with my body. I'm not in insane shape or anything. I run, but I'm not a gym guy or anything. I wish I had washboard abs, but I don't.
I'm really bad at tests of any kind, so I'm bad at auditions. I consider myself educated most of the time, but when I'm under the gun, I just fail.
Fame is one of the potential hazards of this job, but I really just want to make movies. I want to be respected, sure. Who doesn't? But famous-famous? I just don't care about it. And if you genuinely don't give a damn about that stuff, you really are free.
I'm not really often recognized - not really. Or if I am, nobody cares enough to come and tell me that they recognize me.
I guess I just would never be so arrogant as to think that anybody would even recognize me. I didn't even think about it.
I did all sorts of cartoons and stuff. And every once in a while I still do. It's rare, but it happens.
I feel that as a writer and as a performer too. I never really thought about backstory for characters. It was much more of a musical approach: You learn a melody, and then you sing it, I suppose, or you find a rhythm or a cadence that works for the material. And then it's sort of about hitting that note correctly and finding those beats.
Fame is one of the potential hazards of this job, but I really just want to make movies. I want to be respected, sure. Who doesnt? But famous-famous? I just dont care about it. And if you genuinely dont give a damn about that stuff, you really are free.
I think I was always interested in darker characters just because there was a lot more to do.
I realized that work doesnt beget work. Good work begets work. So I got a lot more patient and stopped worrying about working all the time.
Movies that I remember working on, or things that I remember working on, are things that took years of struggle and strife to get them off the ground or get them in front of the public. You don't have that kind of strife or whatever with a television show. It has an automatic platform. You go in, you do your job, and then it goes on air, and that's that.
Everyone's different. I mean, some people write journals for their characters and stuff, but that was never really my area.
I actually was doing ghostwriting jobs since I was 17 years old, so I've been supporting myself off and on with writing jobs for almost 10 years. But those were all things that I did off the books. And now I do a lot more writing on the books.
Now I write often. I decided that I need to write for myself - I can't really direct other people's material.
I was often getting hired to play sociopaths and psychopaths and stuff, which is really funny.
To spend 36 hours or 48 hours of my life binge-watching something seems insane to me.
Characters for me are born on page one and they die on page 100. — © Brady Corbet
Characters for me are born on page one and they die on page 100.
It's so enjoyable to play a bad guy, you know.
I look pretty different. Luckily for me, I don't get harassed or anything like that.
Im really bad at tests of any kind, so Im bad at auditions. I consider myself educated most of the time, but when Im under the gun, I just fail.
Pretty much any time in my career where I worked on television it was usually because of some financial woes or something.
Basically, if I ever went and worked on a crime drama or something, it was usually just for the work.
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