It's hard to find a writer that really understands the intricacies of flirting and the development of love, the development of getting to know someone, the development of chemistry in real life.
— Noah Centineo
High school was cool, man. I went to a public school for my first two years, and then I went and did independent study. I was, like, taken out of it. So I didn't have a normal one.
That boy-next-door, love interest crush has been my niche since 'Austin & Ally.'
I would be so happy to be Young Hulk. I cannot even explain to you. That would be so dope. He was my favorite Marvel hero, and the fact that Mark Ruffalo plays him is sick.
It's exciting now to be able to look at projects and say, 'Well this is right for me; this isn't right for me.'
I was, like, this tiny little kid that was goofy and would always crack jokes or sit in the back of class and not listen to anything that the teacher was saying.
I wake up sometimes and roll over and sleep until 4 o'clock in the afternoon.
I would say one of the most romantic things I've done is I've taken a girlfriend back to her hometown when she hadn't been back for years. It was in Puerto Rico, and we stayed there for about a week and a half. She showed me the different places she grew up around.
I personally believe that if you love someone, and you get your heart broken, and you can learn to love someone else just as deeply as the first, then that is the greatest lesson we can learn on this planet.
I got attacked when I was six years old by a Mastiff.
People love love.
I think Selena Gomez seems like one of the coolest people ever. And she's, like, an activist as well, and clearly she loves love and is a loving person. I don't know if it's clear because I don't know her, but it feels that way.
I guess people just like Netflix. And they like rom-coms, and I was fortunate enough to book two random ones that got sold to Netflix.
I would say I kind of just realized one day that it wasn't worth hiding from my emotions, and that I was unhappy, and that I needed to make a change in my life so that I could be happier.
I know myself. I'm not gonna be a mathematician or a professor.
I'm working a lot. Keeping my head down and focusing and trying to take advantage of the opportunities that have come my way.
When I'm with someone, I give them my time, and I give them my energy because I like making someone feel loved! And making them laugh, and just, like, being there with them.
High school is cool, especially that first-love mentality. That's what 'Sierra Burgess' captures is, like, his first moment of love. That's what I love. I like that innocence.
We are from a swipe-right generation, and that just comes to, 'Oh you're cute, let's hook up,' and that's that. Where is actual, genuine connection that comes from spending quality time with someone?
I'd love to have a career like McConaughey or Shia LaBeouf - I love him in everything he's done. Despite his celebrity status, he's such a human being.
I definitely have that bug; I'd really like to do some auteur, existential pieces, darker films, something that's really reflective of life. But I also love the genre of rom-coms, and I don't see myself completely detaching from that.
I would love to do an action film.
I've met someone on Instagram, and I developed this like, ostensibly intimate relationship with them, and then, turns out, they weren't who they were.
When I was turning 21, I was like, 'Damn, I've been partying like crazy since I was 17...' I was like, 'Wow, maybe I should take a break.' So I stopped doing all that, and I found that a lot of problems I was having in my life, slowly, they didn't go away: they just became way more apparent to me.
I like 'Bright.' Some people didn't like 'Bright' - I loved it. I love that film for how blatantly obvious the analogies are.
I auditioned for the leading role in 'The Kissing Booth' that came out on Netflix, funny enough.
I'm pretty vain.
I've always played the love interest. I've trained for it for a while. These roles are just molds I can pour myself into.
I'm super stressed; I'm super overwhelmed.
I went to New York for work. I was at baggage claim, and I had my headphones on, and I was waiting for my bag to come out. I feel a presence approach me, and without even knowing, I had to side step and take my headphones off, and there's, like, four people looking at me.
'To All The Boys' is one film amongst a couple other romantic comedies through the decades that promotes... I don't know what they're calling it. A modern man? A man that's more emotionally accessible and available and willing to communicate and actually care and nurture.
I moved across the country to become an actor, not an academic type.
Sweet Tarts are dank. 10/10.
To me, when you're crying, you're aligned with some sort of truth. Some inner truth. That's why you cry. You identify. It's just ultimate honesty.
When I was in high school, I wasn't a nerd, I wasn't a jock. I wasn't a bad kid. I just flew under the radar with my homies.
First love is ravaging - it just guts you in the most wonderful way, if you can see through it.
If you have your own money, you feel entitled to spending your own money how you'd like to, and that's a slippery slope.
We all want love. We all want to be taken care of and supported and cherished.
I didn't do well in school, and I didn't really care to cater to certain social structures that were in place to be cool.
It's rare that I read a script, and I immediately go, 'This is perfect. I can see myself in this.'
I don't smoke. I don't drink.
If I ever feel like I'm messing up, making the worst decisions, or I'm just lesser than - if I'm being self-deprecating - I just think, 'Cheer up, dude, you're a lot worse than you think.' It makes me laugh. It takes me out of it.
We're so used to getting everything we want now, my generation.
I swear to God, like, every day, the majority of my day is sentimental.
My concept of a perfect date, really, is just as long as conversation is fun, and you can be yourselves and feel comfortable around each other.
If you love someone - like, truly love someone - I don't think that ever goes away. But what does change is your perspective on the relationship and the dynamic.
I just want to keep being involved in great projects that push positive messages to people.
I think there's been this whole image of masculinity that's been out in society - of brooding, brutish, egotistical, narcissistic men - like, this patriarchy.
I love love.
I act, but I'm not necessarily an actor. Acting is just the first thing people see when they look at me. So I'd like to do more things.