[Ruling over everyone in the rich folks' enclave is the sinister Kaufman, amusingly played by Dennis Hopper: part CEO, part unelected president. He gets the best line in the film when a frowning apparatchik asks if there is any trouble.] In a world where the dead have returned to life, ... the word 'trouble' loses much of its meaning. |
And palm trees. I missed those. Maybe I'll do palm trees next. |
because the reality of things going on around me is more interesting than the fantasies of the world I work in. |
E-Ring. |
George A. Romero's Land of the Dead |
He's a smooth, cool, intelligent actor who loves to work. |
He's simply the best, and if he wants to call acting merely a craft, then he's the greatest craftsman who ever lived. |
I had final cut, and I cut my own throat. |
I had final cut, they wanted me to re-edit it, I refused, |
I live in a city that is billboards. Billboards and graffiti. |
I voted for Bush, and I don't have anything to disapprove of. |
I've been a Republican since Reagan. I voted for Bush and his father. I don't tell a lot of people, because I live in a city where somebody who voted for Bush is really an outcast |
In a world where the dead are returning to life, 'trouble' loses much of its meaning. ... Land of the Dead. |
Independent films in this country are in the same position. Miramax and Fine Line are not independent-they're with Disney! Come on. Or they're with Warner Brothers. They're all with somebody. |
My whole written history is one big lie! I mean, I can't even believe my history. |