Top 47 Quotes & Sayings by Simon Beaufoy

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British writer Simon Beaufoy.
Last updated on December 3, 2024.
Simon Beaufoy

Simon Beaufoy is a British screenwriter. Born in Keighley, West Riding of Yorkshire, he was educated at Malsis School in Cross Hills, Ermysted's Grammar School and Sedbergh School, he read English at St Peter's College, Oxford and graduated from Arts University Bournemouth. In 1997, he earned an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay for The Full Monty. He went on to win the 2009 Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for Slumdog Millionaire as well as winning a Golden Globe and a BAFTA award.

In life, unlike in movies, people don't change - what's the word I'm looking for? - absolutely. They change a bit, slowly.
I believe innately in the human spirit being a powerful and positive thing. And that just comes out, whether you like it or not. It comes out in the writing.
I just can't get excited about money as a motivation in a film. It leaves me cold. — © Simon Beaufoy
I just can't get excited about money as a motivation in a film. It leaves me cold.
British audiences are toughest on British films. So often, a British film is the last thing they want to see. If you please them, you really know you've made an impact.
The poorest people are so incredibly poor, and the rich are so incredibly rich on the other side. That is a kind of fascination.
For me, as a writer who comes from quite a naturalistic tradition, British screenwriting is quite delicate, quite small, and rarified in a way.
I used to live on a barge - it is incredibly good to write near water. There is an ever-changing landscape, so you never get bored.
It's a huge responsibility writing about people who are alive. It's the thing about writing that keeps me awake at night: dramatising real-life events with real people.
I'm very lucky. I actually like screenwriting. I rarely feel a sense of doom going to my desk.
I'm not into being all 'film-y' and going to the premieres and parties. I tend to feel like the embarrassing uncle at a wedding.
As a child growing up in a grey-skied Yorkshire village, I would occasionally happen upon a Bollywood movie on the television. After a few minutes watching a bunch of sari-clad dancers cavorting on a Swiss mountain to tuneless music, I would switch over to some proper drama about housing estates and single mothers.
You write who you are somehow. Even if you try to not to. You can't help but write who you are. I'm just not a very cynical person. I believe in the humanity of people, whether it is just the guys in 'The Full Monty' or Aron Ralston.
The West has become very sophisticated, seeing love as a very complex thing. In Bollywood, it's not complex: it's an arrow straight to the heart. — © Simon Beaufoy
The West has become very sophisticated, seeing love as a very complex thing. In Bollywood, it's not complex: it's an arrow straight to the heart.
The recession of the late 1980s was a very visible humiliation. Cities across Britain had become the victims of botched battlefield surgery - surgery that involved the ripping up of factories, the flattening of buildings, and the razing of the Victorian heritage of heavy labour.
If you've been nominated for an Oscar, it would be ridiculous to say you didn't want to win. It would be lovely to have one of those statues.
Everyone hated the title 'The Full Monty' until they saw the film did really well and then loved the title.
What's important in the filmmaking process has stayed the same. Keep it small, keep it personal, keep it authentic, work with people you like and trust. That process is much longer than the filmmaking process. The development process is a long one, so try and say something of importance.
Real life is messy, and drama is a shaped version of real life.
Being rich would be disastrous for me as a writer. I have always needed to write to pay the bills.
You do need people. You can't live without them. We're all interconnected in some way.
Miley Cyrus twerking - is that really a model for your kids?
I'm a documentary filmmaker by training. You got to start with the real people and the real place.
Repressed English writers have to write love stories because they can't say what they really mean.
India is desperately romantic, utterly unashamed of its sentimentality, its generosity, its fierce pride and massive heart.
'The Full Monty' was my first feature script, and I wasn't that skilled at it.
I'm not interested in superheroes. What about normal people doing extraordinary things?
When you haven't got a job, a joke is about the only thing that's free.
I have a huge admiration for the ability of people to go, 'I don't care if it can't happen. I don't care if you say it's impossible. I am gonna do it anyway.' I think it's an amazing part of human nature. It feeds into faith and belief in human beings to not only do the improbable but almost the impossible.
Everyone's got a boulder in their life of one sort or another that they need to overcome. For most people, it's not a literal one, but there are certainly metaphorical ones.
'Slumdog Millionaire' is a fairy tale, but it starts in a place you really believe, and that came from spending two months wandering around the slums picking up stories and talking to people.
When you make a movie, a dramatization based on the real experience of a living subject, you can't airbrush that away into to a perfect movie arc.
I think you are doing a disservice to a novel just by transposing it wholesale onto the screen, because it doesn't work. They are completely different beasts. — © Simon Beaufoy
I think you are doing a disservice to a novel just by transposing it wholesale onto the screen, because it doesn't work. They are completely different beasts.
If you don't have to get out of bed and do something every morning, that's kind of a curse.
In times of trial, for inspiration, people want to look to real people rather than to fiction.
I've been in electric storms in the mountains. Scary things.
In the midst of global recession, in the face of uncertainty about what's going to happen next, film looks for inspiration to real people.
There isn't a more important issue in the world than global warming. Even the Cold War and the Bay of Pigs crisis were a notional threat.
It's a very weird thing, making a true story, because you need your freedom, as filmmakers, to do what you need to do.
After a while, you become really irritated that you're not recognised as the person who wrote 'The Full Monty.' Everyone goes on about how lovely the characters are. That's because they were written! 'What a clever title.' Yeah, that's because I made up the title!
I guess my approach to adapting books is to treat them with a deep respect on one level and at another level part them to one side and go, 'I'm doing something completely different here.'
If you work in the studio system in America, they've almost got to the point where a computer programme could write scripts. Effectively, they hire and fire enough writers until they get something generic.
There isnt a more important issue in the world than global warming. Even the Cold War and the Bay of Pigs crisis were a notional threat. — © Simon Beaufoy
There isnt a more important issue in the world than global warming. Even the Cold War and the Bay of Pigs crisis were a notional threat.
One doesn’t question a miracle.
They say crying makes the heart lighter
Keep your central character moving, discovering, learning.
I learned to stop being English about things like love. If you make a film in England about love, it's hugely complicated. It's all about saying what the weather is like, and you're secretly telling someone you love them. You know what the English are like; they're very repressed people. You don't get that in India. India is incredibly un-cynical about love. It's a not a complicated thing. It's me, you, love. Let's go.
When you make a movie, a dramatization based on the real experience of a living subject, you cant airbrush that away into to a perfect movie arc.
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