Top 69 Quotes & Sayings by Brett Ratner

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American director Brett Ratner.
Last updated on December 22, 2024.
Brett Ratner

Brett Ratner is an American film director and producer. He directed the Rush Hour film series, The Family Man, Red Dragon, X-Men: The Last Stand, and Tower Heist. He is also a producer of several films, including the Horrible Bosses series, The Revenant and War Dogs.

Everyone who knows me knows that I don't have a prejudiced bone in my body.
I got a Super 8 camera when I was eight years old, and I just wanted to tell stories - I love telling stories.
You can't show a four-hour movie in a theater, really. — © Brett Ratner
You can't show a four-hour movie in a theater, really.
'Vacation' means titillating my taste buds.
My mom had me when she was 16, and I was an only child, which is probably why I received a lot of love and didn't miss that my father wasn't around.
I'm definitely not a nerd.
I hate the iPhone. I love the BlackBerry - BlackBerry wins in my opinion. The iPhone is a toy.
Miami Beach - that's where I grew up, in a middle-class Jewish family led by my maternal grandfather. Me, my great-grandmother - a Holocaust survivor, who was my roommate - my grandparents, my mom and her brother all shared a four-bedroom house.
I love that feeling of going into a packed theater.
Producing is making films without having to work sometimes. It's still making films, but it's a different job.
In this day and age, you need a lot of patience if you are in the movie business.
I've watched 'Being There' over 50 times, and every time I watch it, I love every frame. I just wish I had directed it myself.
When you're fearless, you take more risks because you're less conscious of failure or what can go wrong. — © Brett Ratner
When you're fearless, you take more risks because you're less conscious of failure or what can go wrong.
I would love a robot butler.
Woody Allen is in his '70s and he's making movies, so I look forward to getting there.
I never dreamed I would be producing the Oscars. That was a huge deal for me.
At the end of the day, audiences just want to laugh and be entertained. They want to escape from their reality, and that's why we make movies, to get people to escape from the realities.
Do I have a small movie in me? Yeah, probably, when I'm 60. But I'm not Hal Ashby, I'm not Roman Polanski. I'm true to myself. Whether you like it or not.
When I do short films, I try to do something completely out of my comfort zone, out of my element.
Movies are the biggest export in the world, the biggest American export. It influences people all over the world.
I love 'Guitar Hero,' and I think it's a part of pop culture.
I'm a laugher and a lover of comedy.
I'm not going to turn down an Oscar, but I'm not strategizing for one.
Having love in your heart doesn't count for much if what comes out of your mouth is ugly and bigoted.
I want to print books by people in the film industry.
I learn from every movie I do because on every movie I have a different experience.
I fear God and respect God and love God.
Listening is harder than just acting. Listening is the hardest part.
I love movie directors. I don't care who it is.
I'm not tied to budgets. I'm tied to the story that I want to tell, and how much it's going to cost is up to whatever the economic situation of the studio is.
Before I did 'Rush Hour,' I was a big fan of Jackie Chan movies and I had seen all of them.
I went to a public high school and most of the comedy was coming from the black kids and the Asian kids and the Hispanic kids. And, the coolest kids to me where always the black kids. They were always fashion forward and they always dressed the coolest. They were always the best dancers, and just the coolest people.
I learn more from the audience than I can from anybody else. Not from what they write on the scorecards, but how they respond to the movie while they're watching it - where they laugh and where they react.
I'm constantly being visually stimulated.
In my public life, I'm just a guy who enjoys having fun.
I've been a book collector since I was young, since I was a kid.
They say your childhood influences your tastes and interests, or your approach if you're an artist. So what you create, whatever you saw, whatever your childhood was like - it influences how you're going to end up.
I look for stuff that I'm passionate about. — © Brett Ratner
I look for stuff that I'm passionate about.
People can criticise all day long, I think I've proven myself, I think I deliver. And I agree, box office does not mean a movie's good, but I feel like I'm making good movies and I'm delivering in box office.
I'm not invited to the Vanity Fair dinner where they watch the Oscars - or even the Oscars themselves - so I sit at home and watch it with a bunch of close friends.
I don't have any regrets.
When you're the director, you kinda do all the work.
When I was 13, Eddie Murphy was to me what Chris Tucker was to 13-year-olds when I made 'Rush Hour.' And 'Rush Hour' really came out of the fact that I grew up watching 'Beverly Hills Cop' and '48 Hrs.'
I personally can watch an eight-hour documentary on Woody Allen because I'm fascinated by him. But, an audience can't really sit through more than two and a half hours on any movie. It doesn't matter if Marlon Brando came back from the dead. It's just impossible.
There's no greater feeling than people coming up to me and going, "Man, my father was dying, and we went to see Rush Hour, and it was the greatest night we had in years together. We sat in that theater and we laughed for two hours without stopping. That was just a great memory that I had before my father died."
I’m a hypochondriac. Before I go all the way, I send the girl to the doctor and check them for everything. My doctor has a test to tell if you’re going to catch something in the future even.
I want people to see my movies. My talent, my sensibilities are what people want to see in the movies... While I have the talent to make the kind of movies people want to see I want to continue to do that, keep making big pictures and make what I love. I’m really just making the films I want to see. There’s not a strategy.
Rehearsal? What’s that? Rehearsal’s for fags. Rehearsal. Not much. — © Brett Ratner
Rehearsal? What’s that? Rehearsal’s for fags. Rehearsal. Not much.
Movies are the biggest export in the world, the biggest American export. It influences people all over the world. Music and movies. That's what's exciting about what we do, the fact that it's so global. It brings people together. People don't have to understand the language to laugh at actors. They're going to laugh even though they don't understand what they're saying. Cause they're seeing it.
Would it be nice to win a film award one day? Yes. But the critics are going to have to wait till I'm ready. Right now, my gift is making big movies that audiences want to see.
There's no difference between a tacky Jew from Miami and a rap star. They both want the Cadillac and the Rolex with the diamonds.
I ask my assistants if they're retarded all the time. When the camera is on you, of course, actors have the ability to make it real. For me, if I'm not talking, it is a problem. I have so much more respect for actors after being in front of the camera, and I realize that the hardest part is when you're not talking. Listening is harder than just acting. Listening is the hardest part.
I'd want to marry Cate Blanchett, date Kate Bosworth, and spend the weekend with Elisha Cuthbert.
Whoever writes a bad review, I put their name on a list, and they're going to get taken care of one day down the road. Otherwise, I don't let it bother me. The truth is, these are review-proof movies. The audiences are going to see it. My audience, our audience, isn't reading Esquire magazine to see if my movie is good or not. They just want to laugh, to be entertained, and lose themselves.
When critics or people judge, I think it's harder to make a commercial, pop movie than it is to make a pretentious art film. It's harder to reach millions of people and satisfy them and make them happy. These films kind of get ghettoized, this genre because there are so many big, big movies that are such big hits, but aren't any good. The audiences, they're not judging the style of the director, or the execution of the film. They're just looking to be entertained. They want to escape from their reality, and that's why we make movies, to get people to escape from the realities.
Less money sometimes allows you to be more creative.
I learn from every movie I do because on every movie, I have a different experience.
I used to date Olivia Munn... But when she was 'Lisa,' that was the problem. She wasn't Asian back then.
Michael Jackson doesn't really belong on this planet. He's the most important figure in the history of music. He'll be remembered far longer than George Bush will. 200 years from now, people will be talking about Michael Jackson, and no one's going to mention George Bush.
You've got to think about how to do things for the right price. You have to shoot in different places to be creative and get tax rebates.
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