Reading in a sound booth seems very strange. Everyone has a process they are comfortable with; this was uncomfortable for me.
Drama is drama, and it's really... if it's something small, you put a magnifying glass up to it; if it's something big, you use a wide lens.
My respect for animators and animation directors has gone way, way up and it is just not something you can phone in.
I like horror movies, and in fact I like them even more now after making one. I just think they're much more liberating because you don't really have to apply a very strict logic.
I think you can never ever lie, ever. If you don't know, say, 'I don't know'.
Nothing's occurring in animation - you manufacture everything.
I always wanted to do an animated movie. I find it to be incredibly liberating as a way of telling a story.
I think that's really the kind of exponential factor in being in a punk-rock band or making music videos and movies -pirates and rock 'n' roll go hand in hand. There is a `question authority,' `don't be afraid to break the rules' quality that whether you're a 4-year-old bouncing on your bed as your parents are trying to stop it or an adult longing for that feeling, there's something inside all of us that piracy speaks to. I'm going to do what I want to do and I don't care what you think.
I'd love to do a PG-13 animated adventure. It would be great.