Top 7 Quotes & Sayings by Rick Alverson

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American filmmaker Rick Alverson.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Rick Alverson

Patrick James Alverson Jr. is an American film director, screenwriter and musician living in Richmond, VA. His films have been characterized by their confrontational nature and departure from traditional 3 act structure.

Idealism is a fuel for living, and there is an absolute efficiency about how it motivates and propels us. — © Rick Alverson
Idealism is a fuel for living, and there is an absolute efficiency about how it motivates and propels us.
I've never been interested in the convention of dialogue that facilitates narrative-it's always sort of bored me. I find myself zoning out just listening to cadences of voices and tonality and this sort of thing.
I have been swamped all my life with the idea of the unlimited potential and resources of the American Dream. Not only is this untrue, but it's an injustice to those people who don't have access to this utopia.
I like to think traditional narrative can be subverted by an experiential narrative, by an immersion in the temporal event of the film and a a play with our expectations of that.
I grew up watching movies on television and computer screens. They affected me just as powerfully in the small private space.
The media we surround ourselves with allows us to manufacture our own experience every day, which is a perception of the world that is our own invention entirely, whether it is on social media or what we choose to absorb. This was very different when I was a kid, like generations before us we were exposed to things that were not entirely on our terms. We had to wrestle with and find the relationship with the world around you. It was literal experience, unlike the form of protracted psychic masturbation that is the digital world we live in.
I've never been very interested in literary narrative in movies, it always seems an obligatory trait and the least interesting of all the things film can do. It forces us to look through the thing instead of at it, it teaches us to ignore our senses and look for meaning outside the immediate world of our experience.
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