I always thought there were two kinds of males in the world: the ones who look good naked and the ones who look funny naked.
David Hewlett
I'm lucky that the characters that I get tend to be interesting and a little schizophrenic.
I'll go out at night and look up at the stars and think, 'How ridiculously inconsequential I am in the scheme of things.'
'Cube' was the first big science fiction film I was a part of. It was a fantastic directorial debut by one of my oldest friends Vincenzo Natali and it remains one of my most painful and uncomfortable roles. It's also one of my favorites.
If I was Leo DiCaprio or someone similarly gifted and successful I wouldn't be writing. I'd be too busy acting in all the best scripts in town to try and write them!
When I became an actor, it was disappointing to show up on set and be handed a coffee. You know. I'd pick up cables and get told off.
The sad thing is that I only ever read novels in bed and now only on the iPad, and thanks to Netflix and iTunes my reading time is getting eaten up more and more by movies and brilliant sci-fi television, like the U.K. series 'Misfits!'
I used to be a pretentious little jerk, running around saying 'I'm going to be an awktor.'
Sequels are scary. And making a sequel to something as good as 'Scanners' is even scarier.
The actor's dream is to come in knowing that you're only supposed to do one episode and then come back because people liked it.
I want more sci-fi movies that aren't $200 million movies that I have to wait for and generally be disappointed with.
There's very few comedy sci-fis that have worked for me other than the classics, like 'Red Dwarf' and, of course, 'Hitchhiker's Guide.'
It may not be 'mainstream,' but there's always a market for science fiction.
'Pin' was a creepy little movie that I starred in back when I was cool and thin and had so much hair I didn't know what color to dye it.
I revel in movies where the monsters tower more over the tiny budgets than the characters they threaten.
If I ever write an autobiography, 'Hilariously Unhappy' could very well be the title.
Love scenes in general are the most technical things to shoot.
I think what Stargate has going for it is a sense of humor about their science fiction.
I really love playing McKay. It's one of those roles where every day something is different.
I don't want to know what happens because I enjoy picking up a script and going, 'I do what?!'
What I love about the 'State of Syn' concept is that, while it's exploring science fiction, it's also trying to explore the future of film and television and the Internet, just in the nature of how they put it together and promote it and add apps and all that kind of stuff.
Bad guys are always fun. It's one of the reasons why I love McKay so much.
My love of science fiction comes from the idea of being able to explore ideas and concepts to an either logical or illogical extreme.
I drool like nobody.
Bill Nye, so that guy truly knows everything, and I tested him. I'd come in every day with some new question for him that I'd assuming he'd have no idea basically how to answer it - basically he knows everything.
All my life I have apparently been tying my shoelaces wrong, there is a much more mathematically beautiful way of doing it, that I was shown by Bill Nye - with Neil deGrasse Tyson looking on.
I find that love scenes are the most unsexy things to shoot.
I wanted to do '2001' from Hal's perspective. What it finally ended up being was 'Final Destination' in space.
I suck as a driver. I believe all cars should be piloted and driven by machines.
People talk about drones like they're a bad thing, but they forget there are people behind them. It's a lot easier to blame the technology than to accept that people are a cancer on this planet.
The thing I love about YouTube is it's almost like having an instant audience for improv.
The reality is almost everything I do I cringe about later.
I wanted to try directing.
As a parent, you're struggling to find stuff that you think is suitable for the kids, but also stuff that you'd like to watch with them.
You can make amazing sci-fi films if you want to with very, very little money and very advanced technology that can run on your desktop.
I guess again I find myself playing the somewhat grumpy scientist. Strange how that happens.
It's always a stunt acting opposite Robert Picardo, because you never know what he's going to do.
My father took me and my about-to-be-traumatized friends to Stanley Kubrick's '2001' for my 10th birthday party.
No, I gained weight while playing the role of Rodney Mckay on Stargate Atlantis... breakfast burritos and a near endless supply of donuts.
Yes, I am Canadian, having sailed here from England on a Russian boat called the Alexander Pushkin when I was the ripe old age of 4.
No, I am not allergic to lemon, though fresh pineapple can pose problems.
I used to spill things on my t-shirts, leaving oily dark spots down the front that I would try to hide with loose-fitting dress shirts. Nowadays all I have to do is tell everyone my son did it. I skirt the 'slob' moniker and instead look like a dedicated father who doesn't even have time to change.
'Debug' is '2001' from Hal's perspective.
So I think the popularity of the Internet at the same time as the show made a big part of this sort of groundswell of support for 'Stargate.'
When a kid says 'I'm in astrophysics at school because of your character' that's amazing to me.
I sort of went 'Oh, great. I'm getting these great roles and I love doing them, but I'm going to be Anthony Perkins for the rest of my life.'
You had to do some club after school and it was either the sports or the intellectuals. And right smack in the middle was the acting thing for all the outcasts, which I fell into pretty easily.
I actually am a computer nerd.
My mother says my first television experience was hiding behind the sofa watching John Pertwee's 'Doctor Who.' I loved that show.
I've always spoken very quickly, and when I get nervous, I talk even faster.