Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American director Penelope Spheeris.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Penelope Spheeris is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter. She has directed both documentary and scripted films. Her best-known works include the trilogy titled The Decline of Western Civilization, each covering an aspect of Los Angeles underground culture, and Wayne's World, her highest-grossing film.
When men have money and power they get turned on, sexually. They get horny as hell. Can't imagine why, though.
Before you approach a production entity or even a potential producer, you should write up a treatment and register your show with the Writers Guild of America.
I actually picked up copies of Decline I and II at a flea market once. I walked out without paying.
When we did Wayne's World, it was 14 million dollars and they didn't bug us too much because they just thought it was some little movie that nobody was ever going to see. We showed them.
I love punk rock, but I also love metal.
I can't believe I actually was in my own movie.
Arnold and Jamie Lee must have worked over the years with directors that did 50 takes, because I'd get like three takes or so and say, Ok, that's it, we're done.
There are thousands of directors in Hollywood.
Your best protection is to have an established agent make the contact.
It's really hard to imagine there ever being the kind of impact there was when punk rock happened in the late 70's. I wish there would be one big change like that again, but I don't know if that'll ever happen.
For the most part, studio movies have huge budgets. They don't do anything under 30 to 40 million. When you have that much money at stake, you have so many people breathing down your neck.
I got IRS records to finance what I wanted to do.
If you are looking for a producer, try to contact established producers. Don't let the fear of theft paralyze you, or you will never get anywhere with it.
Nobody wanted to touch Decline III when they found out what it was about.
It is the idea that it's a movie in a movie. So I did it.
I really feel kind of guilty spending 80 million dollars. People are starving in the world.
Decline III, I funded myself, from the studio money. That, and I sold a lot of drugs. Kidding. Don't print that.
Big studio comedies are such a headache.
Me and Johnny Rotten have been talking about doing a movie of his book, No Irish, No Dogs, No Blacks. We have a script, so hopefully that's going to happen at some point in our careers.
It is fun to try figure out the things that really are real and the things that aren't.
In other countries, it's a common thing to have outcast children running around the streets in packs, and I don't think we're so far away from it here.
The first Decline I did was out of sheer love and appreciation for the music. In 1977, it was more about bands, because punk was a new form of music. It was groundbreaking and political.
I live on this nice three acres in Hollywood.
This generation has given up on growth. They're just hoping for survival.
Those movies, Decline I and II and Suburbia, are dearly loved, but they never made any money. I didn't even have the rights for some of them.
I was always into music. I think everyone is when they're a teenager, as a way to drown out the world.
Different parents have different standards for their children.
Rabid fans were literally jumping into the camera.
Now, it's almost impossible to go out and do a film about a new form of music.
Many people have been able to get pitch meetings by just cold calling, especially the smaller networks and especially with the reality shows.
I feel that a documentarian has an obligation to tell the truth as he or she interprets it. And what I mean by that is that documentarians don't necessarily have the same sort of obligations that a journalist might have. A journalist might be called upon to be objective, whereas a documentarian is sort of forced to take sides.
I like to think about society as being a flock of birds: There seems to be a common consciousness in different time periods, and the new common consciousness reacts to the old standards.
My mother was a barmaid and I was raised in a trailer park. I'm used to that language. I put it on the screen so that people could interpret it as they wish.
If I could make a decent living doing documentaries, I would. I don't really care about [the other] stuff so much. But you can't make a living doing documentaries. Although it has affected my work, at least in that I think I make fairly realistic-looking pictures.
What I found interesting is that it's human nature to have a family.