WATCH >> David Lynch on Creativity (Where Great Ideas Come From)
“Ideas are like fish. You don’t make the fish, you catch the fish.”

“Ideas are like fish. You don’t make the fish, you catch the fish.”
“People say this is a satire or it’s an attack on Hollywood, it isn’t. I’m using Hollywood and the film business as a metaphor for our culture and country… Talking about greed, and who we admire, we teach our children to admire people who make money and it doesn’t make any difference how they make it.”
“Bresson, on the other hand, like a Byzantine artist, pushes his Joan relentlessly into stasis: disparity is never more than a stepping stone for Stasis for him. Whereas Dreyer sees Joan as the crucified, suffering lamb, Bresson views her as the resurrected, glorified icon. Bresson has cleansed Joan’s trail of all of Dreyer’s expressionistic excesses: gone are the grotesque faces, the receding arches, the sweeping low-angle tracking shots. Although Bresson uses the techniques of disparity, he does not let them become an end in themselves. In his only recored comment on Dreyer’s The Passion of Joan of Arc, Bresson said,”I understand that at the time this film was a small revolution, but now I only see all the actors’ horrible buffooneries and terror-stricken grimaces which make me want to flee.”
“I think I casted about a hundred radio plays… I was fortunate enough to go to the theater and close my eyes, listen and imagine who these people were.”
“Now, several aspects that we’ve discussed before: The image of him which is the strongest image is the “Treasure Of Sierra Madre” outfit, which is the khaki pants, he’s got the leather jacket, that sort of felt hat, and the pistol and holster with a World War One sort of flap over it. He’s going into the jungle carrying his gun. The other thing we’ve added to him, which may be fun, is a bull whip.”
“All children in some form or another have genius, the trick is to bring it out in them.”
“Orson Welles didn’t like his nose very much…”
“There is a parallel world of independent filmmaking where originality is celebrated. The goal is to make films viewers haven’t seen before rather than to crank out interchangeable sequels. “
“I knew the real Stanley Kubrick”
“I cut my time in half… Blue Valentine was 66 drafts, this was 37, yeah, I’m trying to get faster.”
