Top 36 Quotes & Sayings by Scott Rudin

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American producer Scott Rudin.
Last updated on December 25, 2024.
Scott Rudin

Scott Rudin is an American film, television, and theatre producer. His films include the Academy Award-winning Best Picture No Country for Old Men, as well as Uncut Gems, Lady Bird, Fences, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Social Network, South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut, School of Rock, Zoolander, The Truman Show, Clueless, The Addams Family, and eight Wes Anderson films. On Broadway, he has won 17 Tony Awards for shows such as The Book of Mormon, Hello, Dolly!, The Humans, A View from the Bridge, Fences, and Passion.

The movies that work are the ones in which somebody very smart figured out how to take all the thematic material, all the character material, all the filigree, all the beautiful writing, and put it into a story.
I keep my overhead as low as I can.
I loved doing casting because I love actors, and I am very conscious of what actors do. But I always wanted to be a producer. — © Scott Rudin
I loved doing casting because I love actors, and I am very conscious of what actors do. But I always wanted to be a producer.
Bruce Norris came in twice to audition for 'The Corrections' and subsequently spent many months negotiating every point in a four-year agreement to appear in the show.
I know that movies are basically meant to be entertainment, but I'm not that interested in entertainment.
Private emails between friends and colleagues written in haste and without much thought or sensitivity, even when the content of them is meant to be in jest, can result in offense where none was intended.
I think you have a responsibility to the people you're making movies with, and I take that very seriously. I don't want to let up and I don't want to let down.
If you're going to spend two or three years of your life working on something, you've got to be making the kind of movie that discusses and influences the culture and is engaged in the world you're living in.
I want to make serious work that engages with serious subjects. I'm very lucky: I get to more or less make what I want.
Those critics awards come and go every year, but the finished movie is your work.
I was 10 years old, taking the train by myself to see Saturday matinees, something you'd never let a kid do now. I got very hooked on it.
I got fired from a movie that ended up being called 'Windows,' which Gordon Willis, the cinematographer, directed. I got fired because he refused to cast Meryl Streep, who at the time was at Yale. I told him I thought he was an idiot, and he fired me.
I do what I feel I know how to do and don't do things that I don't. I'm a product of my sensibility.
You read a script, you try and think through what is the best, most wide-ranging way of telling the story: who stylistically, character-logically, psychologically fits inside the world of what you're trying to do. A lot of it, when you're casting, is trying to get yourself in the head of a director.
'The Social Network' was probably one of the two or three things I've done in my life that I'm most proud of. I'm not going to engage in what about it was disappointing. There's nothing about it I was disappointed in.
I always loved doing a movie with Daldry. That's always a huge factor for me.
I want to be able to go wherever I want to go, do whatever I want to do. I guard the material and the filmmaker.
Years ago when I was at Fox, I was the executive on 'Raising Arizona.'
You always feel the ground rumbling beneath your feet, and if you don't, you're an idiot. Mostly because it is rumbling beneath your feet, and there is always someone who is coming up behind you who is as good, younger, and, at least as you perceive it, has more energy and more nimbleness than you.
The best adaptations are the ones that really excavate the material. The movies that work are the ones in which somebody very smart figured out how to take all the thematic material, all the character material, all the filigree, all the beautiful writing and put it into a story.
That's my goal, to feel like I've done the best I could. When I've done that, anything else that happens is a bonus.
Success is extremely ephemeral and very hard to hold onto.
If you have the ability and the wherewithal to create work that's basically in a discussion with the culture we're in, how could you not want to do that?
I was once a fairly angry person.
I have a big affinity for the Coen Brothers.
I've done a lot of movies based on real people, real situations, non-fiction books, magazine articles, life rights. — © Scott Rudin
I've done a lot of movies based on real people, real situations, non-fiction books, magazine articles, life rights.
Classics stay alive because a great actor or a great director wants to do them.
I don't particularly have a wide social circle.
I love work. I love putting together a group of people who are all doing the same thing. The commonality of purpose.
They say there's no second act in American lives. There's something there worth exploring. Giving up an idea of yourself, examining your failure, and seeing if that failure was the system's or yours. What does it mean to not turn out to be the person you want to be?
Anybody who understands how a movie gets made understands that a deep-pockets player is not going to make a movie that has anything defamatory in it without protections.
You want reviews to come the week the movie's opening and not a month before when they do you absolutely no good.
I love stories about women, and I think stories about women are generally pretty underrepresented.
It's always hard when you make a movie that's fundamentally about kids for adults. How do you make people aware of who the adult cast is without making them feel that the adults are the center of it? You don't want to make it misleading, but at the same time you want to make it appealing.
If youre going to spend two or three years of your life working on something, youve got to be making the kind of movie that discusses and influences the culture and is engaged in the world youre living in.
Let's give a big cuddly shout-out to Pat Healy, infant provocateur and amateur journalist at The New York Times. Keep it up, Pat - one day perhaps you'll learn something about how Broadway works, and maybe even understand it.
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