Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by Kevin Macdonald - Page 2

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Scottish director Kevin Macdonald.
Last updated on November 13, 2024.
When I was growing up on Loch Lomondside, one of the first albums I ever bought was Marley's 'Uprising.' I guess that would have been 1980 - just before he died.
I like to take a little of what I learned in fiction and apply it to documentary and vice versa.
It's always nice to have the same people that you are familiar with and shorthand with, obviously, to be around you. — © Kevin Macdonald
It's always nice to have the same people that you are familiar with and shorthand with, obviously, to be around you.
'Uprising' was one of the first three or four albums I ever bought in 1980 when I was 13, and that had a strong impact on me.
I suppose that the Western has always been a kind of mold to which you could pour the concerns of the day, but have them seen in the simple terms of the Western, of one alley or whatever.
I started as a documentary maker, and they're my first love.
I suppose that I'm easily bored.
I suppose making documentaries is like doing journalism on film.
For me, the aim of making any film like this, any film about an artist, would be to send you back to the art.
We should not confuse having a Flip camera with making a documentary.
The submarine genre is a category with all its own rules. But shooting on water is famously tough.
I'm a cynical person who's normally attracted to the dark side of things.
I don't think life gets any better than sitting in the sun while a legend of French cinema tells you stories about making 'Belle de Jour' and other wonderful films, and eating great food.
It's interesting to me that the Arab Spring started in Tunisia, and in the marches, people were singing 'Get up, stand up, stand up for your rights.' — © Kevin Macdonald
It's interesting to me that the Arab Spring started in Tunisia, and in the marches, people were singing 'Get up, stand up, stand up for your rights.'
When you see how people in the developing world react and how they use a camera, you realise how narcissistic we are and how the filming of ourselves and thinking that we're interesting enough to care about is odd.
I think there's always been interest in Bob Marley.
I don't read many young adult books.
I think everything that I've done, I've been involved with for longer. Either you develop it from scratch, or you take something, and you develop it, and you work on the script, but I'm not sure how good I'd be at just sort of taking a piece of material and being a director for hire like that.
I think the parallels of a giant power with overwhelming military superiority and might, with America and Rome, it seems obvious to me.
When we made 'Life in a Day,' we asked people around the globe to record their lives on a single ordinary day. When we were cutting that film, we talked about what it might be like if we chose a day that already had significance to people. The result is 'Christmas in a Day.'
Every film that is made about the past is always a reflection of the present.
People think that the Italians invented neorealism, but actually, Humphrey Jennings did. He was revolutionary in using non-professional actors in his films, and he got extraordinary performances out of them.
With fiction, I've grown to really love the challenge of lying, the challenge of telling a good tale that isn't truthful, and working with performers is endlessly fascinating. You know, learning what a good performance is, how to get a good performance, how much or how little you need to create emotion or to create character.
I was fascinated by making a submarine movie, inspired by the Kursk disaster. This idea of being trapped down at the bottom of the sea seemed so terrifying. I was very interested in making a sub film which wasn't a military film. You think, Well, why are they there, then, if they're not in the military? Oh, well, they must be looking for treasure.
I can't claim my grandfather's work has influenced mine directly, but his life certainly inspired me to follow this path.
I recommend to any of you, that's always a good way to make a film: use the interesting bits.
I went to see 'Francis Ha,' which I could certainly relate to. She ends up wandering the streets of Paris all alone - something I've ended up doing a number of times in capital cities around Europe.
I used the same designer and costume designer on 'The Eagle' and 'The Last King of Scotland.' — © Kevin Macdonald
I used the same designer and costume designer on 'The Eagle' and 'The Last King of Scotland.'
Like a lot of expatriate Scots, when you want to be called Scottish, it's useful. I see myself as being without nationality, as a European: my region is Scotland; my nationality is European - isn't that a very Alex Salmond thing to say?
If there's a principle really worth sticking up for, I'll go the whole way.
John Lennon made wonderful music, which people listen to as music. Nobody around the world is living their life according to the precepts of John Lennon.
I'm not particularly ethnically Scottish; I have one grandfather who is Scottish, although he's called Macdonald, and you don't get a lot more Scottish than that. The Scottish part of my family are from Skye, and I've always been very aware of that - always been very attracted to Scottish subject matter, I guess.
I think we're all greedy. Who do you know who says, 'I have enough! I don't need any more!'? It's part of human nature.
It's so nice to be totally artistically free.
The amazing thing about Bob Marley is that there is no moving footage of him at all for the first ten or eleven years of his career. From 1962 to 1973, there's nothing, not a single frame.
I was born at Rotten Row in Glasgow and brought up in Loch Lomond near a small place called Gartocharn. And it's a bit like anyone: where you're brought up, you have an irresistible attraction to that place; it defines who you are.
The things that are hardest to shoot are the things where you want people just to feel very natural, and you want to do love scenes, and you want to do just kids hanging out and trying to get them to relax.
Put someone on a horse looking cold and wet, and they don't have to act. They just are cold and wet.
My grandfather died before I started making films, but I definitely learnt this from him: believe in your own judgment and stick to your guns - 99% of the time, you'll be glad you did.
There's something about the lack of certainty with a documentary, which is exhausting if you do three in a row. It's nerve-wracking. — © Kevin Macdonald
There's something about the lack of certainty with a documentary, which is exhausting if you do three in a row. It's nerve-wracking.
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