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'm not a leading guy. (unknown)
I'm theater trained. (unknown)
I've done movies where you just show up on set and all of a sudden you're with another guy and you're acting with them and you don't know anything about them and that's hard. (movies)
In the end I'm probably home half the time. (unknown)
It never ends, that never ends; it's never like you're sitting in the backyard on your lawn chair with your beer just kicked back waiting for the call. (unknown)
It's got to be about the story. That's what I think my job is. I'm there to service the story. (story and story-tell)
Let me tell you something, planes and kids... I've got a 3 and 1 year old, I don't wish that on anybody. (planning)
Literally, I read the script a lot and I learn it, no matter what the part is - how big or small the part is. I put a lot of thought into it and I think about it constantly. (work)
Most people laugh at situations rather than a tagline anyway. (people)
My sister gave me a big bucket of Cool Whip. Isn't that awesome? For two weeks I basically watched Emergency! and ate cool whip with a spoon. (family)
Not that I think improv is bad, but I just rely more on a character than trying to think of something to say. If something comes out, it comes out. (character)
NUMA, the National Underwater and Marine Agency, is an actual organization. (organization)
So maybe I'll play the crazy sidekicks throughout my whole life and that will be fine. Or maybe I'll do sidekick parts and in five years it will be a different thing. I don't know, maybe. (acting and actors)
The things that I laugh at are crazy people, people who take themselves so seriously. The guy mad in the grocery store line is funny. You put it in a movie and it's hysterical, if it's done right. (movies)
There's a lot of balancing involved, especially when you have people knowing what you do and associate you with certain types of characters. (character)
We forget about listening. With kids, you have to because it's the only way you're going to be good - to react to what they're doing, and to mesh with them. (children)
What it all really comes down to is reading a character that you think that you can do well. That's the hard part. finding that, and you hope that it falls into something like the war picture or the western. (character)
When I show up on a film set, I don't want to worry in my trailer about what I'm doing. I want to play PlayStation because I don't get to play that at home. (movies)
When you're acting and you're pretending there's bees, you're pretending. You're not acting anymore because it's all about looking right as opposed to this movie where no, there's a real helicopter chasing us so you get a real reaction. (acting and actors)
Yeah. I mean, I've been approached with other kind of, I don't know, sidekick parts, especially in these movies. So much of the time they're these fops who are always trying to catch up and falling down and you just want the lead to shoot him in the head. (movies)
You don't have to be best friends to be best friends in a movie. (movies)
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