What goes down on film is different to what you see with the naked eye.
— Christopher Eccleston
Twelve years on sets watching directors, I've taken a bit from everybody and rejected a lot.
The money is better in films and television. But in terms of acting, theatre is more rewarding.
Rather than disliking theatre, I've expressed a preference for television because it tends to deal in its small way much more with issues and is able to reach a broader church of people than theatre.
My parents always knew I was hopeless at everything else, I was fortunate in that I was backed all the way. I came to it late and only because I thought there'd be loads of women and drinking!
Jacobean plays, before Shakespeare, were particularly visceral.
I went being unemployed for three years to being the lead in a British feature in the days when we only made two a year, 1990. It was ridiculous really.
I think theatre is by far the most rewarding experience for an actor. You get 4 weeks to rehearse your character and then at 7:30 pm you start acting and nobody stops you, acting with your entire soul.
I only ever worked on interiors, and an interior is an interior. I don't know what they did about exteriors.
I know exactly where I've come from, I know exactly who my mum and dad are.
I had bags of energy as a kid.
I don't like to watch playback. But being on the set, watching the way the camera is being moved and the way the light is being used, you do get an idea of it.
I wasn't always such a great fan of Shakespeare, mind you. I can guess we all at one time had it rammed down our necks at school, which tends to take the edge off it.
We like to think that our parents made a decision to bring us into the world.
Theatre is expensive to go to. I certainly felt when I was growing up that theatre wasn't for us. Theatre still has that stigma to it. A lot of people feel intimidated and underrepresented in theatre.
The film is about Joe discovering who his mother and father are and his relationship with them, and the identity crisis he goes through once he finds out who his parents are.
On The Others, very atmospheric and probably mysterious is how I would say it felt to be on the set. It felt just a little uneasy, the atmosphere that we were trying to capture.
Many times I've sat with a camera and another actor and seen all their fears and insecurities and struggles. You want to support them and help them as much as you can.
It can be very difficult to trace your birth parents.
I want to direct but I think I'd be bloody awful and I don't want to produce but I think I'd be a very good producer because if I believed in something I'd be able to protect it.
I think the themes of belonging and parentage and love are obviously universal.
I love my accent, I thought it was useful in Gone In 60 Seconds because the standard villain is upper class or Cockney. My Northern accent would be an odd clash opposite Nic Cage.
I heard the various terms of abuse at school and probably indulged them in the way you do as a kid.
I got a tiny part in a play, auditioned for another one and got that as well. Not only that, the first finished on the Saturday and the other started on the Monday which is like an actor's dream!
I care more about telly because it made me an actor and there's a much more immediate response to TV. You can address the political or cultural fabric of your country.
We all need a firm sense of identity.
The person who gives you your first job is so important in any industry.
Television, although It's in steep decline, still occasionally gives voices to people who don't have voices.
Often as a child you see someone with a learning disability or Down's Syndrome and my mum and dad were always very quick to explain exactly what was going on and to be in their own way inclusive and welcoming.
Lots of middle class people are running around pretending to be Cockney.
I've never been up with the times, always been slightly out of step.
I used my instincts. It's very easy to imagine how you'd feel, actually. I just had to tell the narrative.
I think film and television are really a director's medium, whereas theatre is the actor's medium.
I love Dead Ringers. A democratic set, the work was taken seriously.
I had to help to coax the performances and I really enjoyed that extra responsibility.
I don't see a lot of films. I'm quite choosy, but there's certain films that stick out.
Any horror element is as much psychological as special effects.