Movies are movies television is television.
Bill Hanna and I owe an awful lot to television but we both got our start and built the first phase of our partnership in the movies.
In movies and in television the robots are always evil. I guess I am not into the whole brooding cyberpunk dystopia thing.
I think everyone who makes movies should be forced to do television. Because you have to finish. You have to get it done and there are a lot of decisions made just for the sake of making decisions. You do something because it's efficient and because it gets the story told and it connects to the audience.
I was in television drama which is a first cousin to the movies and I trust myself to make the right decisions.
Here's the thing about movies all movies end up on television. That's their life. Whether you like it or not I don't care how much money you spend on it or how big or broad the film is or who the actors are in it eventually it's all coming out of the box.
I'll tell you what I really enjoy. We all go to the movies we all watch television we know what they're about how they work. When the main character is a cop or a spy it's very exciting but I also very much enjoy when the main characters are nobodies - a trucker.
I've had the good fortune to have a much more diverse life than most people would professional sports and television and news and movies.
Live theater to me is much more free than the movies or television.
On radio and television magazines and the movies you can't tell what you're going to get. When you look at the comic page you can usually depend on something acceptable by the entire family.