Top 107 Quotes & Sayings by Justin Lin

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American director Justin Lin.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
Justin Lin

Justin Lin is a Taiwanese-born American film director. His films have grossed US$2.3 billion worldwide as of March 2017. He is best known for his directorial work on Better Luck Tomorrow (2002), the Fast & Furious franchise from The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) to Fast & Furious 6 (2013) and F9 (2021), and Star Trek Beyond (2016). He is also known for his work on television programs like Community, and the second season of True Detective.

Terminator' was one of my favorite films growing up.
My parents were unconventional for Asian parents.
All of my definitions of family were heavily influenced by my 'Star Trek' experience. — © Justin Lin
All of my definitions of family were heavily influenced by my 'Star Trek' experience.
When you have an opportunity to do something again, the money goes up and people get more conservative.
As 'Warrior' comes together, I can't help but feel the pride of correcting a wrong and helping bring Bruce Lee's dream project to life.
After I made 'Better Luck Tomorrow' and started taking meetings in Hollywood, I quickly learned that Asian Americans weren't even in the conversation as a minority, since there wasn't even a significant enough audience, and especially an audience for Asian American content.
Obviously, 'Fast' has been a big part of my life.
Definitely the hardest thing is to find time to be grounded with real life, but without it, I don't think I'd be able to continue to grow as a filmmaker.
Cinema is actually very backward. When we see gay characters or people of color, they're always there for that reason. I'm personally kind of sick of that. I love to see characters who just live and breathe and are comfortable in that space.
I've been fortunate to be able to try everything. But I have to say 'Warrior' has been my pride and joy.
Technology has grown so much that there's a whole idea of gluttony. Sometimes you get carried away because you can have a camera go through the window, but do I need a camera go through the window? Those choices are up to the director.
Ang Lee and 'Hulk,' for instance - a movie about a guy with different-colored skin and a lot of repressed rage? Sounds like the perfect film for an Asian, to me!
I'm the child of immigrants.
It's about supporting the many talented artists and filmmakers out there trying to create work from that marginalized point of view. Go out and buy tickets to their movies and plays, support their crowd sourcing campaigns, show the industry that there is a viable audience for this work.
When I was growing up, the honor role kids were picked on by the jocks. And those kids said, 'You know, 15 years from now, I'm going to be their boss and own them.'
As soon as I saw 'Chinglish' on Broadway, I began to envision this smart and insightful cross-cultural comedy as a film. — © Justin Lin
As soon as I saw 'Chinglish' on Broadway, I began to envision this smart and insightful cross-cultural comedy as a film.
Do what you love. I've seen so many people through the years calculate and speculate on what films to do in order 'to make it.' And every time those projects crash and burn.
I always end up in these volatile situations.
Fast and the Furious' is really a postmodern Western.
We had a pretty good life, growing up in Taiwan, and I think my dad really made a concerted effort to say hey, we're going to take a chance and go halfway around the world so that my kids can have more opportunities.
We make movies and we all try our best and sometimes we connect with the audience, sometimes we don't.
Annapolis' is a very personal journey about this working-class kid trying to find out who he is, and every time he steps into the ring we get a sense of who he is as a person.
We came over when I was 8 from Taiwan. That was my life: going to school, working at the restaurant, playing basketball.
I loved 'Fast,' but I'm not a car guy.
Like, action to me is no fun if it's not built around character.
For the longest time, the Asian-American community would talk about representation, but I think it's also about the freedom to really shape, create, and explore issues that are important to us, regardless of whether it's positive or negative, as long as it's three dimensional.
Without 'Annapolis,' I wouldn't have gotten 'Tokyo Drift' - I wouldn't be here today. And, so, it's part of who I am.
I've always admired Bruce Lee for his trailblazing efforts opening doors for Asians in entertainment and beyond.
Hollywood should be global.
For me, I always loved summer movies. I love indie movies, foreign films, but there's definitely a part of me that loves summer movies, ever since I was a kid.
I'm extremely proud to be part of the 'Fast' franchise, it is an experience I will always treasure.
I've sat in so many meetings where they talk about converting movies to 3D just for the China market and just to make more money. I saw that people in China work long, long hours and that it's expensive to go to the movies, and you want to rip them off for even more money? I don't think that's right.
People I work with are part of my family now: I feel like that's the new sense of family around the world.
You want to have pressure and tell stories that you find a real reason to tell, aside from any business reason. If business is your only reason, that always goes badly.
All my friends were 'Star Wars' kids but I didn't go to the movies, so I was the 'Star Trek' kid.
The great thing about a big studio movie is that you get to work with the best, the most talented craft people in the world. But you have to be able to communicate, trust, and empower everybody.
I think one of the great things is that when I got started, no one would return my calls, and now I get a lot of phone calls, which is good. I have options.
I kind of approach action/non-action very much similarly. It has to be character-based and it has to kind of come off the theme and the overall arc.
When I think of high school, stills are so important: it's all about the wallet with the kids - they define themselves with pictures, who they know, whose pictures they have. Yearbook pictures.
I made a lot of mistakes along the way, but feel incredibly lucky to be in the position I am now and to be able to play a small part in trying to support talented, aspiring young filmmakers out there through a program like 'Interpretations' who, like me, had the desire and passion, but no connections to the industry.
He was never a kung fu guy. Now, he's Mr. Kung Fu. Oh, man. Even Chow Yun-Fat gets typed! — © Justin Lin
He was never a kung fu guy. Now, he's Mr. Kung Fu. Oh, man. Even Chow Yun-Fat gets typed!
Boxing is one of the very few things left in life that you know who you are as soon as you step into the ring.
Working with actors is actually something I treasure a lot.
There's a respect factor in filmmaking, like in sports, where certain things are kept in the locker room.
I grew up, from ages 8 to 18, watching reruns of 'Star Trek' with my dad and my mom when they got home from work.
When I was making the 'Fast and Furious' movies, I wasn't trying to make a 'Fast and Furious' movie.
For me, when I was growing up, everybody I knew was a 'Star Wars' kid.
Film is similar to a basketball game. When that buzzer sounds, win or lose, the only thing you can control is how much effort you put into it.
When I was in film school I had this great professor, Jerzy Antczak, a Polish filmmaker, and Joe Russo of the Russo Brothers were in my class. It was this kind of Easter European philosophy of motivating camera only through character and motions, and just exploring with lenses. That was the best year of my education in my life.
Working with Zhao Wei and Huang Xiaoming, they're not just Chinese stars, they're movie stars.
You can't cheat comedy. You know, it either is going to be there on the day you capture or it's not. — © Justin Lin
You can't cheat comedy. You know, it either is going to be there on the day you capture or it's not.
My Taiwanese parents came to America with no money and supported my brothers and me as small business owners in Orange County, which is close to L.A. but about as far away from Hollywood as you can be.
I consider everybody on 'Fast' my family, you know we grew up together.
Growing up, my parents had this little fish and chips restaurant in Anaheim in the shadows of Disneyland, and they didn't close until 9 P.M. As a family, we didn't eat dinner until 10 P.M., and we would watch the original Star Trek every night at 11.
I love films where even if you don't like the film, it doesn't matter. It's about respecting a point of view.
I grew up peeling shrimp and making tartar sauce.
Growing up, I felt there was nothing my dad couldn't do, but didn't get the chance to do when we moved. I think he latched on to 'Trek' because of the sense of exploration and discovery, and hope. I think that's what he connected to.
I love Kubrick.
The martial arts genre a lot of times has been relegated to B-level action.
It's dangerous to buy the American Dream without questioning. We need to ask, 'Why do I want this dream?'
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