Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by David Lowery - Page 2

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American director David Lowery.
Last updated on December 24, 2024.
I love dialogue, but I'm also terrified of it. In all my movies, I've done my best to cut out as much dialogue as possible. I love the spaces in those silences. Even in 'Pete's Dragon,' I was so happy that the first twenty minutes have about five or six lines of dialogue.
With 'Pete's Dragon,' Disney was very excited about the movie I wanted to make; they were very supportive of it, and it was a smooth process. I was really surprised by that.
I love animals and their behavior. I watch cat videos all the time. — © David Lowery
I love animals and their behavior. I watch cat videos all the time.
I certainly did not envisage making a Disney movie. The most I hoped for was to be able to pay my bills. I was not a go-getter. I was very type-B.
I find everything in life a little bit sad, but I also find a great deal of hope everywhere I look.
When you cut from a long shot to a close shot, you're doing it for a reason, or if you let something stay in long shot for a long take. On the short films, I was teaching myself how to express something personal cinematically, how to use the language of film the best I could.
There is a palpable sense of history in the homes that I choose to occupy. I think that's one of the reasons I gravitate towards old homes: I really like that sense of history and that sense that I am one step in a very long process that trails out in both directions around me - before me and ahead of me.
It's something that you pick up at a history class in college, the idea that history and time is something to which we can't even hold a candle to. We, as human beings, are just a small element in the overarching sweep of narrative history. That really had a profound effect on me, that realization.
I don't think I'm the best screenwriter in the world. It's just important to me to write my movies so I'm personally invested in them.
If I can't finish a screenplay, if I can't get to the last page as a writer, it probably means it's not a good movie for me to make.
I think all people are familiar with thinking about their death and trying to come to terms with the fact that we will, at some point, no longer exist. The loss of one's ego is very tough to reconcile with; you really have to do a lot of mental gymnastics to wrap your head around the idea of just not existing anymore.
If your financiers care about the movie, they will be involved in a very constructive fashion, but it can get out of hand very quickly, and that is something to be aware of in any type of filmmaking.
I have a very short attention span, which is funny. I mean, you'd watch me and think that I don't, but I actually do. — © David Lowery
I have a very short attention span, which is funny. I mean, you'd watch me and think that I don't, but I actually do.
'Peter Pan' is a beloved property. It's a property that was brought to the screen many, many times before, so one has to not only justify the reasons why one might make a 'Peter Pan' movie in 2018, 2019 or whatever, but you also have to do justice to the source material.
I try to live my life with grace and through grace even though I don't particularly believe in the divine - and that's a direct result of my having been raised Catholic.
I like being able to go to the cinema and sit and spend time observing something without thinking about plot or what one character is saying. I feel like I'm able to connect on a much more profound level.
I often conflate the domestic and the cosmic on a daily basis.
When I was a kid, Santa, the Tooth Fairy, my stuffed animals - they were real. There is the tremendous suspension of disbelief that you have as a child. It's harder as an adult.
I never put a premium on making a living. It was never one of those things that was important to me.
I know I have trouble watching my own films.
I'm happy to keep making Disney movies.
I realized that filmmaking is an eminently scalable act. No matter how big or how small, there's joys and stresses that will all scale themselves magnificently to fit the production.
Grief reveals itself in the most mundane activities, like eating. It's never when you're looking at old pictures.
I have a longstanding, unapologetic love for Ke$ha.
I guess you can't really turn a camera on outside in Texas without getting Terrence Malick comparisons.
In my darkest moments, I have not eaten an entire pie, but I have turned to other baked goods to find solace.
The image of a bedsheet ghost standing all alone in an empty house was something I was obsessed with. I really wanted to make a film about that image, and I was waiting for the right story to come along. When it did, I did my best to honor that image.
One of my biggest regrets is that I didn't finish college. — © David Lowery
One of my biggest regrets is that I didn't finish college.
I have a repository of titles I like in my head, and I am always looking for a movie that I can put one on.
I make movies to be watched the way I want to watch them, and I want to watch them in movie theatres.
The films I love are very precise, and every shot means something; every shot should convey something new.
I learned to not separate writing, shooting, and editing, it's all sort of one big mess of creative output.
Obviously 'Pete's Dragon' is more commercial than 'A Ghost Story,' but when making them, I'm just trying to tell a story that matters to me, that ultimately would satisfy me as a moviegoer. Because watching movies is my favorite thing to do. I watch a lot of them.
I have so many aspirations and interests that would not fit within the Disney brand. I need to make sure I'm engaging those proclivities as well.
I grew up in a deeply Catholic home. Our parents always encouraged us to march to our own drums, though, so some of us are still Catholic and some are not. That's always going to be a part of me though; little bits of it trickle into my work. Whether it's an embrace or a rejection, I'm not always sure, but I can't avoid it.
I can't watch my movies at their premieres - I learned that lesson the hard way.
At the end of the day on 'Pete's Dragon,' if we didn't nail something, we could come back and pick it up later. I always knew there was a safety net built in that Disney would not let the movie fail. But in this case, with 'A Ghost Story,' it was all on the line.
With the transcendent or supernatural, they help us contextualize our own lives while we are here on this earth. On a narrative level, as a storyteller, they are a wonderful tool and technique by which to explore those hopes, those fears, those existential dilemmas that we all face from time to time.
I want to live a very positive and optimistic life that has a wonderful outlook on the future and the impact that I will have on the world and the people around me. — © David Lowery
I want to live a very positive and optimistic life that has a wonderful outlook on the future and the impact that I will have on the world and the people around me.
I love films that are more random and chaotic, finding moments and capturing them.
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