Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by Alexander Payne

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American director Alexander Payne.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
Alexander Payne

Constantine Alexander Payne is an American film director, screenwriter and producer. He is best known for the films Citizen Ruth (1996), Election (1999), About Schmidt (2002), Sideways (2004), The Descendants (2011), Nebraska (2013) and Downsizing (2017). He is noted for his dark humor and satirical depictions of contemporary American society. Payne is a two-time winner of the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, and a three-time nominee of the Academy Award for Best Director. In 2017, Metacritic ranked Payne 2nd on its list of the 25 best film directors of the 21st century.

I'm hoping one day I can make one really good film.
What is filmmaking but groping in the dark?
I mean, look, I love movies, not just the ones I make... In fact, I don't like the movies I make very much. — © Alexander Payne
I mean, look, I love movies, not just the ones I make... In fact, I don't like the movies I make very much.
There's a bizarre insistence on how a story should be. 'The protagonist must be sympathetic!' they say. Whatever that means. I never engage in that discussion. I never use that word, 'sympathetic.' I just know 'interesting.'
The most heinous shift in American films is that they reinforce good things like 'couples' and 'relationships.'
If you're trying to recreate life, the life that you best know is the one you grew up with.
In a sense, 'Schmidt' is the most Omaha of my films. But have I gotten it right? I'm not sure. Did Fellini get Rome right? Did Ozu get Tokyo right?
But it's just that the whole country is making generally lousy films these days and has been for quite a while. That's the big problem that we all have to think about.
Life mixes tones all the time.
A book suggests a whole world and story that I could have never thought of in a million years.
I think cynicism lasts. Sentimentality ages, dates quickly.
A pitfall of making a comedy with a studio-and it's also an American cultural thing-is that I get tired of being encouraged to go always for laughs.
The biggest fear I have is to die with regrets, and of course that will come true. — © Alexander Payne
The biggest fear I have is to die with regrets, and of course that will come true.
I get asked, 'How can you have such failures in your films?' Well, what else is life about? There's some sense of constant failure in something. Humor gives you a distance from it.
When you're a houseguest and you leave, it's nice to straighten something up or send your hosts a useful gift. And when you leave the planet, it's nice to have made a positive contribution.
In the moment of making films, I want to share my observations of life, not of other films.
They say you can do honest, sincere work for decades, but you're given in general a 10-year period when what you do touches the zeitgeist - when you're relevant. And I'm aware of that, and I don't want my time to go by.
The hardest part of this whole movie-making endeavor is finding ideas.
The best actors are always the ones who've directed as well, as they understand all the problems you face.
I think that Peter Jennings is the only decent one of the big three.
I like actors who, when you see them on screen, you sense a person, not just an actor.
I don't feel despair because I am able to make the films I want to make, and that gives me hope.
Well, that's what life is - this collection of extraordinarily ordinary moments. We just need to pay attention to them all. Wake up and pay attention to how beautiful it all is.
The kindest thing a director can do is look with open eyes at everything.
I don't want all of American cinema to be big cartoons that are just made to be digested by the entire world.
Hollywood films have become a cesspool of formula and it's up to us to try to change it... I feel like a preacher! But it's really true. I feel personally responsible for the future of American cinema. Me personally.
When I'm shooting, I don't care who the star is. I have an actor playing a part, and I'm serving the script, not serving anyone's career.
There is an audience out there for literate films - slower, more observant, more human films, and they deserve to be made.
When you watch a movie, you don't want to feel like a machine made it. You want to feel a soul.
It seems that our politicians see the world in black and white, so why not our artists? Did Woody Allen's 'Manhattan' have to be in black and white? No. But is it fantastic that it was? To see New York like that? Yes!
Jesuits encourage an intellectual rigor in a way that I like.
You begin a film more with questions than with direct intentions. It's more of an exploration and discovery.
I want all of my films to belong to me.
I don't think so much about verbal comedy. I always think about visual comedy. I was raised watching silents, and I'm always thinking about how to make cinema, not good talking - although I want good talking. I'm much more interested in framing, composition, and orchestration of bodies in space, and so forth.
As the years go by and I make more films, I am increasingly interested in capturing place as a vivid backdrop for my films.
The actors are the greatest executors of tone in a film. They're the most important cinematic component.
I never wanted money worries to slow me down or make me take a job I didn't want.
If you were falling in love and you could go back in time and relive a day and see the banal things you did that you'd forgotten about, you'd weep, looking at that day. — © Alexander Payne
If you were falling in love and you could go back in time and relive a day and see the banal things you did that you'd forgotten about, you'd weep, looking at that day.
Even if we die at 100, we're still dying young. I want at least 700 years. There's a lot of travelling and books to read and movies to see. I'm not going to squeeze it all in in 85 years.
I still have energy and some degree of youth, which is what a filmmaker needs.
Anytime you cast a movie and you need someone famous in the lead part, you're a prisoner of whoever happens to be famous in the six-month window in which you're trying to get a film financed.
I like voice-over in films, and most of my films have been voice-over films.
I'm so not interested in producing, other than doing my own work, producing my own films. I only do it as favors, for other people to get their films made.
The novel succeeds on terms exclusive to literature. A good film succeeds on terms exclusive to the cinema. That's why so many bad novels can become good movies, like 'Jaws' or 'The Godfather.'
You just never know when you're living in a golden age.
The best cinema is about ethics.
I think if you watch most of my films with the sound off, you could still tell what's going on.
My flag is always flying. My shingle is always out. I'm always looking for movie ideas. — © Alexander Payne
My flag is always flying. My shingle is always out. I'm always looking for movie ideas.
I guess maybe I try to make movies that are closer to real life than are many Hollywood movies. But I still try to stay within a commercial narrative, a contemporary American vernacular.
That's how I like to do it with actors, have them really go for it and I'll tell them when it's too much. It's always easier to bring it back then to push it further.
I always wanted 'Sideways' to be like a great 1960s Italian film.
You look at how many years you have left, and you start to think: 'How many more films do I have in me?'
Omaha, like Rome, is built on seven hills.
I definitely in filmmaking more and more find writing and directing a means to harvest material for editing. It's all about editing.
Each one of my movies becomes easier to get off the ground.
Joe E. Lewis said, 'Money doesn't buy happiness but it calms the nerves.' And that is how I feel about a film being well-received.
I think a badly crafted, great idea for a new film with a ton of spelling mistakes is just 100 times better than a well-crafted stale script.
'Independent' means one thing to me: It means that regardless of the source of financing, the director's voice is extremely present. It's such a pretentious term, but it's auteurist cinema. Director-driven, personal, auteurist... Whatever word you want.
Marketing has supplanted story as the primary force behind the worthiness of making a film, and that's a very sad thing. It's film only as a function of consumerism rather than as an important component of our culture, and that's everywhere around the world.
I like to think of film-making not just as an act of personal self-aggrandisement but rather as an act of public service.
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