That's the thing about making a movie: You never finish editing. They just take it away from you.
Abel Ferrara
As an old-time New Yorker, it's not that I miss the '70s and '80s or whatever. I miss the fact that there was a certain kind of energy that exists when people can live for nothing.
My life is proof that I don't need you to do what I do. If there's no one to see it, I'll watch it.
I live with a bunch of yuppies and models.
No one can stop me from talking about my movie.
Most filmmaking is about shaking hands and just starting.
In the film business, it's basically honor among thieves.
The last day of your life is still going to be a day.
There's no such thing as a non-final cut director.
The actors that I love to work with, they're hard on me. They're pushing me.
A script is not a piece of literature it's a process.
With 'New Rose Hotel,' I knew that I was getting paid a $100,000 fee to write, produce, and direct, and that's all I was going to get.
I don't know what DVD commentaries are about. I'd like to strangle the person who came up with that concept.
It's funny, the hardest thing to do is to make something look like it's fast, loose and improvised, and get somebody to laugh.
The secret is not to make a film that causes something like Virginia Tech to happen. The secret is to make a film that stops it happening.
The more you get into any religion, it becomes the same. It really becomes how you treat other people and how you get outside yourself. How you look to help other people, and how you get out of this 'I, me, mine' type of thing.
Listen, anybody who has a film festival has the right to show what they want.
Certain actors wanna get paid, they think working in a low-budget movie is being ripped off. But for others it's like, 'Yes, let's do it.'
My existence is about making movies, so I've just got to rock and roll with the punches. You want to make movies on telephones, I'm there.
I was born in the Bronx, and then my father moved us to the country at an early age.
It's only Western civilization that, God forbid, you talk about dying, when it's the only thing we know for certain, right? Everyone's going to die, so what's the big problem? 'Oh, God. Don't talk about it. Don't think about it.' I mean, I'm one of them. I'm not a big fan of talking about dying.
As barbaric is we are, it's a miracle we haven't blown ourselves off the face of the earth so far.
I was raised a Catholic and when you're raised a Catholic they don't teach you to think for yourself. You're taught not to think too deeply about things.
I'm not a big fan of talking about dying. And then I make a movie where I kill everybody.
I'm a lapsed Buddhist like I'm a lapsed Catholic. I take it to a point.
Life is what happens when you're doing other things, right?
I don't care if I get $50 million to do a film.
I don't have a problem with Werner Herzog.
Making money is not gonna change anything about what I am, except I won't answer the door.
But I'm never gonna get to a point in my life where what it costs to shoot a movie is going to determine what it is. The limits of my imagination is the only thing that's gonna stop me.
I don't care if I get $50m to do a film.
Mulberry Street was the beating heart of the Italian-American experience, but you don't find those gangsters now. I live with a bunch of yuppies and models.
Where I come from you're not raised to think on your own. It's not that you're pushed to read the Bible. The Bible is read to you.
I come from a world where you get the film done, that's a success.
I grew up in the '60s, which was a creative time, so it wasn't that big of a stretch to go from a baseball bat to a guitar to a film camera.
I'm about my characters.