Top 65 Quotes & Sayings by Jonathan Levine

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American director Jonathan Levine.
Last updated on December 23, 2024.
Jonathan Levine

Jonathan A. Levine is an American film director and screenwriter.

For me, I just value my friendships so much. I mean, I love my family, too, but my friends - I have a really special connection with my friends.
I really hope everyone who saw 'Twilight' sees 'Warm Bodies,' but at the same time... I don't resent the comparison on a level of quality because I don't judge other movies like that. Now that I make movies, I see how hard it is to do everything. I pretty much love all movies.
Usually, the kills are almost Wile E. Coyote kind of things in horror movies. — © Jonathan Levine
Usually, the kills are almost Wile E. Coyote kind of things in horror movies.
The way 'Coming Home' uses music in general is incredible, but the final song that really kind of crescendos all of the emotion that the whole movie has kind of been building to is this song called 'Once I Was' by Tim Buckley.
I think I'm always conscious of not letting things fit into a specific box. Being a filmmaker and trying to chart a career, you never want anyone to be able to pigeonhole you into one specific thing.
'Warm Bodies' was a more long-term thing; I had to write the script, who knew if it was every really going to happen, if I'd find the right actors, and so on, so I grabbed '50/50' because I just fell in love with it.
I have a lot of friends with bad taste in music - some might say that I have bad taste in music.
I definitely think for up and coming filmmakers, people graduating from film school, people that want to do their own movies, horror movies are a great way to go.
If you know how to shoot a scene, then you know how to shoot an action scene. If you've seen an action movie, and you watched it, and you paid attention to how scenes are constructed and where the camera is and how the camera moves, then you know how to do it.
Any time I hear certain songs I put in a movie, I have to not listen to them anymore because I associate them with that movie. They take on that association rather than the association I had when I first heard them. So it's kinda bittersweet to put a song in a movie, honestly.
Genre is a really great shorthand you can have with an audience. In the same way you can use music to create a connection with an audience, it brings so much of their knowledge of what genre really is to the table. You have a shortcut to connect with them. I really like that.
I've been a huge fan of Hal Ashby forever. And I think that the distinctive thing about 'Coming Home' is the love story, and how - kind of emotionally real it is, and how these two characters allow each other to see their - kind of vulnerabilities. And it's great because it's a love story that's not really that cheesy, either.
I grew up with Woody Allen and early Spike Lee movies in which New York was such a specific character. The city has a certain vibe and beat which really informs your entire existence.
I like to branch out as much as I can, but I feel like the movies that are closest to my heart are 'The Wackness' and '50/50' - the ones that are dramedies that have that human element to them.
I really don't like when you see improv scenes go on too long. It really bothers me, even if the jokes are good. — © Jonathan Levine
I really don't like when you see improv scenes go on too long. It really bothers me, even if the jokes are good.
It's rare that movies can sort of capture the tone of life; movies always feel like they have to be one thing or another.
After 'Mandy Lane,' I didn't really know what to do because I didn't know anyone who'd made a feature yet.
I have about 100 gigs of music, and I'm always going through thinking about what song I can match to a scene and all that.
To be a director, you have to think you're the best. Ever since I went to film school, I imagined that you have to think deep down that you want to be Martin Scorsese or you want to be P.T. Anderson. Like, am I as good as those guys? Absolutely not. I feel like I keep learning, and I feel like I keep getting better.
As a director, there's no natural career progression. So after 'The Wackness,' which was very personal to me, I was very, very picky about what I was going to do next, to the point where I think that I was almost too picky.
My first real television-watching experience was when I watched 'L.A. Law,' like, at 10 o'clock Thursday nights with my parents. They would let me stay up late.
As a director, your expectation and reality don't always match up, and I think that that's... I think it's a little jarring.
I'm a writer and director. And the movie I've seen a million times is 'Coming Home,' directed by Hal Ashby and starring Jon Voight, Jane Fonda and Bruce Dern.
I like a pretty relaxed, fun set. Everyone knows they can bring whoever they want and hang out.
I like zombie movies, and I like genre movies a lot. To watch. Less so to make, I think. But I grew up on that stuff. I would just grow up watching a lot of horror movies, a lot of slasher movies and then zombie movies.
I love subverting expectations or playing with the sort of unspoken kind of connections that the audience has.
For me, it's always more interesting to look at things when you don't really have a horse in the race, so to speak.
I think that's the great thing about zombies, is, you know, going back to even 'Night of the Living Dead,' they've always been a tool for kind of holding up a mirror to us and showing us something about ourselves that we might not otherwise know.
I used to obsess on critical reactions to my films, and it's really not a healthy way to live your life, so my new take on it is simply, 'I hope people like it!' I'm not going to be looking at the tomato meter for at least a year! I was very lucky on '50/50' that most critics really liked it.
Do I wish I was Martin Scorsese? Yeah. But am I really proud of the movies I've made and really happy that I get to keep making them? Yes.
I kind of viewed '50/ 50' and 'Warm Bodies' both as my next films after 'The Wackness.' In my head, I was just like, 'I'll try the big, fun, adventure-weird movie, and I'll do the small, heartfelt comedy-drama, and one of them will probably work out, and I'll get to work more.'
I love Jamaica so much. I've been there so much, and I think it would be great if we could shoot a movie there.
I definitely think New York is a very, very vibrant, wonderful city, but I certainly, of course, can't help but miss a lot of the stuff that's no longer there.
I learned some big lessons on my first film, a horror film which was never released in the U.S., even though we sold it to Harvey Weinstein for a lot of money.
I always look at myself as kind of a work in progress. I hope that's not always the case. But for me, every film is a learning experience.
I was intimidated by Malkovich for, like, a couple of days, and then I wasn't. He's awesome. He's so cool. He was so wonderful to work with.
That's the great thing about being a director. You have your list of things you have to worry about and things you don't have to worry about. If you can hire someone or cast someone who equates to not having to worry about, it's great!
I really like using genre to tell a story about characters but also use it as a Trojan horse to tell social or cultural commentary. That's where the best stuff, especially in the zombie genre, comes out of.
I feel like comedy is where I'm most at ease, but I also have an allergy to silly jokes. — © Jonathan Levine
I feel like comedy is where I'm most at ease, but I also have an allergy to silly jokes.
I really like it when movies take a song and use it to counterpoint a scene.
I watched 'Return Of The Living Dead.' That one's cool, man. I like that one.
I just think a lot of movies are too long. I want to know how to make my movie as tight as possible.
On '50/50,' even though it was 8 million dollars, it was all acting-intensive.
I used to drive a convertible around L.A. a lot.
There are things that I can tell my friends that I just can't tell my family, just as far as how I'm feeling about things. My friends know me the best in a certain way. I just think old friends are really, really important.
I have a cameo in every movie. In '50/50,' I'm in the back of the bus.
I think it's cyclical. Zombies have been around for ages, and vampires have run their course; we've had so many vampire movies.
I don't often watch something I've done on TV. Usually, I'll change the channel and watch something else.
As I continue to evolve as a filmmaker, I'm going to continue to do different stuff.
I was actually shooting 'Warm Bodies' on the day that '50/50' came out, which I don't recommend to other filmmakers because I was sort of a wreck. Actually, it was good for me, because I had work to do, so I couldn't obsess all day and be checking how '50/50' was doing!
For me, the best high school movie is, like, 'Fast Times' and what Cameron Crowe is like. — © Jonathan Levine
For me, the best high school movie is, like, 'Fast Times' and what Cameron Crowe is like.
In rehearsals, I like to create an honest environment that is kinda free and fun.
I think Giuliani started a trend that Bloomberg continued with rampant gentrification, and I think it's tough because why would any city choose not to do that?
Zombies have always had a lot of built-in social commentary.
'Warm Bodies' - I was contractually obligated to deliver a PG-13 movie. But, like, I wanted it to be PG-13 because it's for younger people, and I don't want them not to be able to see it. I mean, you have to kind of think about the marketplace as well.
I was Paul Schrader's assistant for six months before I went to film school, and he's very much about knowing what's going to happen on every page before you even start writing dialogue - the entire plot and character arcs are mapped out.
Right after 'The Wackness' came out, it was a really exciting time, and then it was a bit disappointing when it came out. Even though not that many people saw it, I was still getting offered some movies. I was thinking that people would just stop calling me since it didn't do very well at the box office.
I think people will always want to go see a movie, whether it's a comedy and you want to see it and laugh with people, or whatever.
For whatever reason, the films I gravitate towards do have these strange sort of tonal balances to them... I kind of realized on '50/ 50' why I liked these blending of tones, because I think it's kind of what life is like: funny one minute, sad the next, scary the next.
I don't like being pigeonholed at all. It stemmed from after 'Mandy Lane': I was being offered all these horror movies. I love horror movies, but when I dreamed of being a director, it was always doing all sorts of things.
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