Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Canadian director Norman Jewison.
Last updated on November 22, 2024.
Norman Frederick Jewison is a retired Canadian film director, producer, screenwriter and founder of the Canadian Film Centre. He has directed numerous feature films and has been nominated for the Academy Award for Best Director three times in three separate decades for In the Heat of the Night (1967), Fiddler on the Roof (1971) and Moonstruck (1987). Other highlights of his directing career include The Cincinnati Kid (1965), The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming (1966), The Thomas Crown Affair (1968), Jesus Christ Superstar (1973), Rollerball (1975), F.I.S.T. (1978), ...And Justice for All (1979), A Soldier's Story (1984), Agnes of God (1985), Other People's Money (1991), The Hurricane (1999), and The Statement (2003).
I was really excited to have the opportunity to make Fiddler.
It's an entire industry focusing on young male viewers that want action and violence. They sell us something that isn't valid. They're selling films like a product.
Betrayal... is my favorite subject.
Well, you know the old line - to be nominated is what it's all about. I think that I've done pretty well - I've had about 46, or 47 nominations from my movies, and my films have won about 12 awards in total, so I don't really have any complaints.
Look, I'm just a storyteller. When I make a film, I never want the film to become a vehicle of social propaganda.
I was very disappointed that Denzel didn't win Best Actor for The Hurricane because I thought he deserved it.
I still get a lot of material but I find that as one gets older you get more fussy. You know you're going spend a year or a year and a half on this and you know there are only so many films in you so you get a little bit more selective.
When I make a film, I never want the film to become a vehicle of social propaganda. If I wanted to do that, I'd make documentaries.
I'm in the mood for another Moonstruck experience, for another romantic comedy.
But Madonna has a small amount of talent when it comes to movies.
As you know, in America there's no rights for the artist, so whatever films I've made kind of belong to the studio, so if they want to remake it they can.
Everything Sholom Aleichem talks about in his plays and his short stories is about people, family, man's relationship with his God, the breaking down of tradition.
And I think all Nazis didn't see themselves as bad people. I've never met a racist yet who thought he was a racist. Or an anti-Semite who thought they were anti-Semitic.
I think you get better as you get older.
I don't like to think that maybe I'm just getting old. I'm not too excited about watching a huge explosion. I'm more interested in people and characters.
Every generation deals with the breaking down of its tradition, and I think that they rediscovered the film.
Moonstruck... was one of the few romantic comedies to be nominated for a Best Picture Oscar.
We also have a tendency to root for the fugitive. We're always on the side of the animal being chased.
I think I've done pretty well. I've had about 46, or 47 nominations from my movies, and my films have won about 12 awards, so I don't have any complaints.
I think all Nazis didn't see themselves as bad people. I've never met a racist yet who thought he was a racist. Or an anti-Semite who thought they were anti-Semitic.
We're always on the side of the animal that's being chased. We always seem to be on the side of the rabbit or the fox and not on the side of the hounds.
A lot of American actors I work with are in character all day long. You can't talk to them. It's Method and the whole thing.
Michael Caine is a movie star, but he's also a great actor. I can't say that about every movie star. It's the concentration he has.
I'm going to do an adaptation of the Italian film, Bread and Tulips. I really like that film.
I mean they're making remakes of my films and I'm not even dead yet! Why would you want to make a remake?
In America there's no rights for the artist, so whatever films I've made kind of belong to the studio.
I don't make films to win prizes. I make films to make films.
And even Moonstruck - for some reason the audience were just in the mood for a very romantic film, because it's one of the few romantic comedies to be nominated for a Best Picture Oscar.
With most British actors, it's amazing. I think they start with the character on the outside and work in.
I work with a lot of movie stars.
When you shoot a musical, you're shooting to lipsynch tracks, so we had to figure out our choreography and work out what we wanted to do with each number before we did it.
Do what you're told, and everything will be all right.
When you deal with a film that takes place in Europe, and you're going to work in English, you'd better work with European actors.
The album for Fiddler really took off. I think it was a combination of John Williams and the score. It was a very classy big album.
We live in an age of publicity and hype. There's something about success that dehumanizes you, whereas failure reminds you of who you really are.
Obviously, In The Heat Of The Night was a landmark movie because the timing was perfect. It was in the middle of the Civil Rights Movement.
The eradication of anti-personnel mines around the world is one of the most important tasks facing the international community.
I try to find stories that I would think that everyone would find interesting, and just a good entertaining story, and then if I can find a story that has a raison d'etre behind it that I feel is important then that's the best for me.
When the small independent film, which depends on its artistic appeal rather than wide commercial distribution by an MPAA member, is now denied access, the playing field becomes unfair and uneven.
But I've never met a racist yet who thinks he's a racist. That's always the disturbing thing about when we begin to look at ourselves.