Through all the relationship stuff I've gone through in the past few years, I know there are fundamental differences in how men and women view sex and how they view their futures.
— Aaron Eckhart
But then, even with sex, I'm more in the school of less is more in movies.
Yeah, but there's nobody who represents romance to me like Cary Grant.
I would like to direct.
But I guess I like playing flawed guys 'cause it gives a place for the characters to go.
Right now, I have to admit, that I'm more interested in giving people a little bit of hope and goodness.
If it helps me in the way that if this movie is successful, I get to make more films, great, and the more films that I make and the more interest that I'm allowed to cover, the better for me and the better, hopefully, for the people who like to watch me.
When it gets down to it you just have to act.
I often feel that my days in New York City, that I was here for five years, didn't get one job, went on a thousands of auditions and literally did not get a job on a soap, not a movie, not TV, not nothing, although I did do some commercials thank God.
Yeah, I'd like to get the girl and at least make it through the film.
But I will say this: In my humble opinion, knowing nothing about it, I do believe that they have remote viewers working on where Osama Bin Laden is. I absolutely, 100%, convinced of that.
Some movies get rushed out right after you make them and I'm not always happy with that.
I'm sort of fascinated by the whole espionage crime thing.
I think women can be as cruel as men, and men as tender as women, and vice versa.
If we're talking about masculinity and tenderness, I don't look at Clinton.
Well, I've thought many times when my career was in the toilet, that I was going to have to seriously consider getting another job, I don't know what I'd do.
I mean, the problem is, I think I'm a great writer.
I always ask, why can't I be just like Cary Grant or something.
I think they are very important because westerns have a code and a symbolism.
There are different reasons to make movies.
I think that maybe that's my weakness, in that I don't know how to do it, so I just do what I do and try to do it as passionately and as well as I can.
I'm an actor and it happened to go my way that day.
I'd like to do a romantic comedy.
The F.B.I. is about nuts and bolts. It's all about witnesses and procedure and walking the streets.
Directors, producers can make you look good or make you look bad.
I think every actor wants to be an FBI or cop at one point.
It seems to me if you want something badly enough, whether you're a man or a woman, you'll do whatever you have to do to get it.
I think America right now is looking for somebody who appeals to every faction.
I would love to get great performances from actors as a director, because that's what I'm always looking for, a director that's going to help me go places I've never been before.
Some movies I see today have the most dramatic plot points but the actors are not playing them dramatically.
I got as much information as I could, so I wouldn't look stupid, but this is a post 9/11 world and there's only so much you can do with the FBI in terms of research.
I can think of films that I'm producing right now that are extremely hard-hitting, graphic films, that nobody necessarily wants to see, graphic in terms of violence, of adult content and racial and historical subject matter.
I've been working for many years and I think I've managed to work with some of the best people in the business, which has been rewarding and an apprenticeship.
It makes me feel good that I can now sit there and go, I've worked with Jack Nicholson, Al Pacino, all the great actors that I've worked with... Sir Ben Kingsley.
I'd like to do more family dramas.
I don't do comedy so much although I would like to do a comedy.
A film has its own life and takes its own time.
You never really know as an actor; it's completely out of your control, in terms of editing, and music, and film stock, shot selection, and what takes they use.