Zitat des Tages von Emily Browning:
I know a lot of parents of kid actors I've worked with have pressured them into acting, but my parents are different. I'm really lucky to have them because they let me make my own decisions.
When you act, you really have to give all of yourself, and if you're doing that purely for money, it's not healthy.
For me, I see filmmaking as art.
What we're supposed to do as actors is be able to portray real human beings and emotions. And if you grow up in this bubble of showbiz and you only know people who make movies, you don't really have an understanding of the world outside.
I've been acting since I was a kid, so I just feel confident in the fact that I can do it to some degree. I've never thought I was amazing; I've just thought, 'I know this, I can do it.'
I'd rather make an interesting film that gets people talking, that maybe some people hate, than make the kind of 'entertaining' film that everyone feels ambivalent about.
I'm a very private person. I find it very daunting to have to give private parts of myself away to people, you know?
After Hollywood, you know if people are interested in you or in the fact that you've been in a movie. You know who your real friends are.
Being from Australia, I've never even touched a gun. It's so not a part of our culture.
I'm into video games, but only real specific lame video games.
For me it would be unhealthy to be a method actor; I'm not mentally stable enough for that - I need to separate my two worlds.
I was lucky - the first eight productions I auditioned for, I got cast.
With my boyfriend, we can make sexist jokes to each other because we know it's absolutely not true. If I get home from a long day and he says: 'Go on, get in the kitchen,' it's funny because we know it's not our lives.
I usually hate going around and doing press. It sort of stresses me out.
I tend to over-analyse things. I'm not the type of person to flip a coin and let things happen.
I can cry at the drop of a hat. I've always found that easier than laughing in films.
Often, people who want to make interesting films simply don't have the money to do it.
With young people, there's often that carelessness, allowing yourself to get into danger - recklessness, I suppose.