Dougray Scott Quotes (38 Quotes)


    It was very hot, very rugged and quite inaccessible. But I had a fantastic time. The work is the thing that motivates me.


    What was the reason for invading Iraq' Was it a humanitarian crusade or an economic one' I would be inclined to say the latter. It was the same with the Civil War, because the landed gentry's money was being stolen by the king.

    When I'm playing a character like Jonathan in Ripley's Game I want to be in the moment when he's feeling pain; this very ordinary person who finds himself in extraordinary circumstances.

    Wonderful, quite idyllic, actually. It's very green, beautiful. Lots of golf courses, which was great for me. Lots of fishing areas, but lots of industrial areas as well, which weren't so nice.


    When you do bigger films, the financiers take more risks.

    I tend to do golf charity things because it's much safer and you don't get much chance of a broken arm or leg.

    Sometimes people say to you that you should try to be in a bigger film, but it's the way it pans out.

    Method acting is a label I don't really understand, because there's a method to everybody's acting.

    Sometimes it is easier to play someone who is far away from you.

    Sometimes you just can't walk away from films you're offered, like the Dylan Thomas thing.

    Right from the beginning of time there were these very very attractive bad guys. It's a life that most of us have never led, so that's what makes it so attractive. The jobs that they have, the world that they occupy, is very alien to us.

    I'm doing a Dylan Thomas film, Map of Love, with Mick Jagger producing again. It's a wonderful script.

    I just love jumping into someone else's life. It is a relatively cheap way to experience things you would be too scared to contemplate in your own life.

    People go to see a film because it's a great story and it's visually exciting to watch.

    As Moses, I just want to be an ordinary man. In his head and heart, he's in the wilderness. He wants to focus his life on something he believes in, and yet he's not sure he's the right person. He has to lead his people to the Promised Land and figure out what God sees as worthy in him.


    Being a salesman and an actor were not that dissimilar: It is a good lesson in covering up your feelings. No one wants to buy from someone who looks depressed.

    Fairfax was incredibly important to the shaping of the country.

    In terms of jumping into a character's skin, I try to immerse myself in the role as much as possible to bring me closer to them. All I do is what's required to achieve what I want to achieve.

    It quite often happens that they attach a name to a project and it doesn't get all the financing it needs.

    You grow up a lot in terms of your understanding of the industry and how to deal with the corporate things.

    I don't like acting things; I like feeling things.


    I read Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman, and I could recognise that world. My dad had been a salesman for the last 30 years of his career.

    You're making a movie, not a documentary. If you made a film like the historians would like you to make, you're not going to go and see it. I'd rather see paint dry.

    You should be careful what you wish for, as the reasons for war get confused. One person can be very clear in their motives, but others can have different agendas.

    There was just no other way to play it. There was no question this was a man who was tortured and troubled and filled with so many inconsistencies, plus the pain of dealing with the shocking task he was asked to undertake.

    You couldn't take football away from me, you couldn't take acting away from me.

    I got involved in script development from the beginning. It was nice to see how a film gets made right from the beginning. It was quite hands-on for me.

    My focus never wavered; I never accepted the film was not going to be finished.

    With the situation now, people might be intrigued to see how a country coped with war all those years ago.

    It is s a massive amount of people, half the population of Scotland. Can you imagine a tragedy on that scale in the western world. Something like that, just wouldn't happen. We have to dig deep.

    You'd have to have one hell of an imagination to completely make up a story, but historians are very anal about what they think should be portrayed on screen. Thankfully they don't make movies; we do.

    I try and do films I know I'm going to enjoy watching as well as being in.

    It's difficult to get films made, especially films about poets.

    It is wonderful to be in a place where your character has trod and you're walking on the same ground he has walked on. It's quite eerie.



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