If you have distance from the events, then your story can work as an analogy or parable, rather than its literal narrative.
Firms are a bit concerned about things like oil prices and US growth but actually the change (in firms expectations) is quite small so I think broadly theyre looking for more of the same.
I wrote 'Hereafter' quickly and without mapping it out too much or being too schematic. As an exercise, I think that was incredibly important.
To what degree are historians chroniclers of the truth and to what degree are they just novelists, frankly?
The minute you become a leader of a country, you go into a very small club. You join that sort of pantheon of other world leaders.
Generally, I read nonfiction. Theres very little fiction that I enjoy enough to spend my time reading. I am generally a nonfiction guy.
Movies feel like work, and reading fiction feels like work, whereas reading nonfiction feels like pleasure.
I just try and do something good. But as a writer, you're slightly out of control.
I am not a politics wonk. I like the idea of my writing reflecting more about who I am or other people.
The real beauty in my professional experience has been friendships and collaborations with filmmakers.
There's no way of telling why you want to do things beforehand. Something just grabs you. It might not grab you six months later, and it might not have grabbed you six months before, but at that particular moment it grabs you, so you jump on it.
People test movies within an inch of their life, so that the entire audience experience is a uniform one.
There are so many other people involved in the making of a play or a television series or whatever... even if you're a novelist there's so much in just the marketing of a book, or even the time... the zeitgeist, the moment at which it comes out. There's a lot you can't control.
The thing that I'm most in love with is the thing that I'm writing at the moment.
I never go back over something I've done and I never watch them again.
I read nonfiction. There's very little fiction that I enjoy enough to spend my time reading. I am generally a nonfiction guy.
You're working with other people and sometimes it doesn't work out the way you want, and sometimes you didn't realise what a mistake you've made until you see it projected.
You can only do the best you can in the minute that you're doing it.
It's really a lovely feeling to write knowing that failure is taken off the table because if it's bad you just never show it to anyone.
It might be more difficult because you haven't got a book or a prop, but for the most part I like to write unpaid... initially and my own stories.
I give everything my best shot and sometimes it doesn't work out and other times it works out much better than you thought.
I'm always pre-occupied with what it is that I'm doing at the moment.
You don't really work together with Clint Eastwood. I mean, he takes the script and he shoots it - and he shoots it very faithfully.
I can't relax when I'm watching a biographical drama, because it's so close to what it is that I do that I just long for more fiction - so that I can switch off.
The stuff that I have perhaps become known for that's based on fact, and English statesmen shouting at each other all the time, doesn't entirely represent who I am. I am not a politics wonk.