Loading...
Clive owen insights

Explore a captivating collection of Clive owen’s most profound quotes, reflecting his deep wisdom and unique perspective on life, science, and the universe. Each quote offers timeless inspiration and insight.

I think anybody who bets on horses and says they win is probably a liar.

I don’t mind looking like I need a good wash and a good meal... Any actor who starts taking ‘sex symbol’ seriously or thinks of themselves as a sex symbol has got some serious problems.

You go back to those films of the '40s and '50s and hear the dialogue, the way the people played off each other, the wordplay. I think we've really lost that in movies.

I couldn't bear a marriage in which one partner hinges on the other.

I think there is a lot of overexplaining both in writing and acting. People don't need to be hit on the head.

I certainly am not a great believer in over-rehearsing between actors, and certainly not doing the dialogue too much.

Good dialogue is very important.

For me, London is and always will be home.

For an actor, it's very important to get a clear idea of what a director wants, and their intention for what they want to get out of a scene and how they want to shoot it. Having that knowledge is really valuable, for an actor. It means you can deliver more.

A lot of the projects that I do, I like to be involved with earlier. I just feel that, certainly from an acting point of view, it's easier to do my job, if I'm included in what the intentions are, for why people are doing what they're doing, especially with a director.

The idea of goodies and baddies has always fascinated me, and what people consider to be a goodie or a baddie, because I've never seen any of my characters as baddies.

Rudeness can make me angry.

Audiences can be very judgmental.

Sometimes you find your destiny on the road you took to avoid it.

The theater's a live thing, and film is, to some extent, a discipline where you're putting everything together and trying to execute something exactly. You do it away from people and then you present it at the end.

I believe that we live in a time of fractured families where maybe fathers aren't getting enough time to see their kids because life's complications and hardships get in the way of those things.

Ultimately, to have a career in movies, to a certain extent, certainly in England, you can't sustain a career in just English movies.

I think it's dangerous to get into ideas of planning careers.

I've done a number of things based on real people or true stories or based on books, and I'm a great believer that you have to be true to the script.

I feel for those 19-year-olds who get thrust into the limelight that young.

A huge part of acting in movies is appetite. You do your best work when you've got a lot of appetite and you really want to embrace something. When you get tired, you don't have that hunger.

I'm sort of one of those weird actors who whenever I do a play, I think, "Oh, we should film this." As opposed to have to belt it out of ourselves in a theater auditorium.

When there's an idiot driving crazily in front of you, that can wind the best of you up.

I don't like it when people are trying too hard. That goes for clothes, for acting, for everything. It's just not good when it seems like you're making too much of an effort.

You're always dealing with emotions as an actor.

Outside of being home with my family, I prefer a crowd.

I'm always very aware of the physical challenges of work. I train much more than I did when I was in my twenties, and I've done some very physical films, and I always get properly prepared for them and get as fit as I can.

When I was younger, people used to say you only really prove yourself as an actor on stage. And I disagree with that. Some of the finest acting I've ever come across has been for film.

I don't think you necessarily identify and believe in the motifs of the character, but you have to want to play it and want to commit to the lines.

Every journalist who is not too stupid or too full of himself to notice what is going on knows that what he does is morally indefensible.

If you explode onto the scene at a very young age, there are so many people pulling you in different directions. It takes time to recalibrate and see what's important.

Obviously, I'm attracted to heavier movies.

The thing about Hemingway that people forget is that all the stuff he did was at a time where people weren't traveling that much. At 19 he travels to Italy. He goes to the Spanish Civil War. He goes to China, he goes to Africa so at that time to travel that much is really incredible.

I treat any scene the same - dialogue, action - you're still creating something in character. It's all acting, fighting.

I dread karaoke. I hate karaoke. I can't sing - that is why.

I did it for the money. But its not worth much if you cant face yourself in the mirror. Respect is the ultimate currency.

I never really look at life and worry about missed opportunities.

The sexiest part of the body is the eyes. That's what I believe.

I'm not the kind of actor who goes into exhaustive research for each role.

I'm just constantly trying to renew and give myself new challenges and push myself to uncomfortable places, trying to get better.

I'm competitive with myself, not at the expense of everything around me. I never wanted to be a movie star. I just wanted to act.

I was very keen on playing a victim.

As a teenager I was crazy about David Bowie. He was a huge inspiration for me. I dressed a little bit crazily in school and dyed my hair every colour under the sun.

There's not a big gun culture in England at all still.

I want to go anywhere and everywhere and explore as much as I can.

Very often when you see families it's all perfect and neat, and parenting isn't like that. You do have constant negotiations. Things are ever developing and ever changing, and you constantly have to evaluate how you deal with your kids.

For me really good acting is about subtext.

I just like to keep challenging myself, keep it varied. It's a craft, and I'm constantly trying to learn and get better at it.

Kids before they're 7 or 8 are like little manic obsessives. They become completely hooked on things and they're slightly crazy.

America's been very, very good to me. I've been very lucky and worked a lot there, and appreciate and love the work that I've done.

Very often on films, even without a producer credit, I'll be involved, very early on. I want to be there as the thing is taking shape.

Parenthood and family come first for me, and when I'm not working I'm cool with the Teletubbies.

As I get older, I've been having a better and better time.

When I started in the theater, the joy for me was playing different parts, and I get set alight by different people and different worlds. The biggest joy for me is jumping around and going from that to this to that, never feeling that I'm any one thing - because I'm not, and we as people aren't.

I guess I'm not that metrosexual. My bathroom cabinet is hardly overflowing with products. I only really have my stuff for shaving. I can't honestly say I moisturise, though I probably should.

I like to play characters that are convincing, that aren't just straightforward and nice.

I'm a huge fan of 'The Exorcist.'

Belfast during the Troubles looked like a different world.

You see these actresses who have had Botox or something else done, and it takes you out of the film.

You come ready to work when you know that you are going to get a couple of gos and it. It kind of galvanizes everything and there is something about it that keeps it very alive.

For some people, an event happens and they are thrown into a tabloid feeding ground.

Movies are certainly a director's medium, so getting the opportunity to work with really good directors is everything to me.

No matter who the character is and how big their role, that each person in the story is a human being and deserves respect. Even if they're in the story for ten seconds, I didn't want you to just see them as this entity passing through that's serving all of the other people.

I've been very fortunate with the scripts I've had and the people I worked with.

I don't like being consumed by work all the time. I consume myself so much when I do a part that I like to step away from it.

One of the things I love, more than anything, is jumping around and playing lots of different parts. I love the variety of playing different characters.

I'm English and I'm used to coming from a world of period dramas, where there's a very polite restraint to everything. Everybody's sort of sitting in drawing rooms.

I watch a film and the most important thing to me is what I think of the movie.

I think that Phil Kaufman is one of the best directors that I have come across.

One of the things I'm most proud of about my career is the fact I've managed to keep options open.

I was at the birth of my two girls.

I'm the git in the family.

I've had some great times with actresses, but that's in a movie.

It's important to me that everyone is treated with respect.

I go off and make movies; I come home, and I'm a dad and I hang with my girls.

I go home to London in between jobs, and in London, my life has nothing to do with the business. It's a family life, hanging with friends.

I never aspired to be anything. What I've done is beyond my wildest.

I live in London and I love living in a gun free environment and long may it continue.

The further you run from your sins, the more exhausted you are when they catch up to you.

I do a lot better if I sit around and think about a character for a couple of months.

I do wear suits all the time.

I find sometimes that if you do too many takes, it starts to become meaningless to me. It is hard to sustain it for me. I don't want to do too many.

I actually really love working with young actors because they're so responsive and instinctive, and it's a much less honed craft that they're employing.

There's certainly a huge element of luck in me ending up where I've ended up.

The financial implode is bound to be reflected in the movies that are being made, there's no question.

One of the views of the [actor's] job is that whatever age you are, there's a role that's about who you are and where you are. There are parts for that age that you can bring things to.

There's something to play if there's conflict going on. Whatever that conflict is, that's where drama is; if the character is grappling with something you've got something to play, there's layers to it.

I'm a big fan of comedies and dramas, and I watch tons of movies.

The worst piece of advice I've gotten in my whole career is from somebody who said, Remember, it's all about likeability.

I am a big soccer fan, and a very big Liverpool fan.

I really believe you can carry yourself in such a way that people don't notice you.

Death frees the beast.

Something I don't like seeing in other people is naked ambition, when somebody is really pushing hard to get to where they want to be. That's the way I look at that word - like you must be stepping on someone to get there. And I've never been comfortable with that.

I always want my options to be open.

Without faith, without belief in something, what are we?

I had to ride a horse once. In 'King Arthur.' I said I could ride, but I had to call for lessons on the day the deal was signed. I started out on this little chunky thing and slowly moved up. It was months of work.

When I look back, if I'd played something differently, it might not have gone the way it did. So I don't feel like going back to my twenties and changing anything.

A room full of great sportsmen is so much better than a room full of actors.

I've got an age that I do think of myself.

I have a problem with a lot of men's fragrances because they are very strong. Somebody somewhere thinks that masculine means powerful smells, and I find them overbearing and not very pleasant.

I don't do facials or any of that stuff, but my workout regime does tend to depend on whether I have to take my top off in my next film because otherwise I know I'm too heavy.

After drama school I did a seven-month tour of Europe performing in 'Romeo and Juliet.' I played Romeo.

I'm one of those actors where usually I'll read a script, and then I'll have a flurry of notes. I'll ask a hundred questions about things, and really get in there and examine it.

I love to mix it up. I love to keep doing different things.

Jewelery isn't really my thing, but I've always got my eye on people's watches.

I can't remember ever being involved in a fight in a movie where I haven't done most of it.

I was not a very fearful kid, really.

When you are shooting action, there is a satisfying thing because your objectives are very clear.

Action scenes are not that different from other scenes.

It's just lovely to be involved in a movie that does go back to the basics - characters and great writing.

I'd like to do a film which is funny.

I can honestly say I've never chosen a film because where it's shot is convenient.

The medical operations are so challenging because they're so technical, as well. I assumed before we started that we would do the classic thing, when it comes to the operations, that we would do all of these inserts with real doctors.

I would never give anybody any advice about anything.

You won't find a better young actor than Jaeden Lieberher. I ended up having one of the best times with him, really. Going to work with him every day was a treat.

When you're doing those operation scenes, you not only have to be on top of the dialogue and the rhythm of the dialogue and what's happening dramatically, but you've got to technically get the rhythm right, so that everything is fitting with the dialogue at the right time. And you're performing the operation to the audience that's watching it. Thackery has to present it, as well. In some ways, that's the most challenging.

Film is very much about capturing the essence of things - if you feel it, and you've got the right person shooting it, it'll come across. Theater's a different animal; it's physically different and requires a different discipline. In the theater, you're mining the same material, constantly honing the same thing, executing it and keeping it alive and fresh.

If you are making a script based on a book it can be frustrating going back to the source novel, because you're turning the story into a totally different thing; the narrative of film is different from that of a book.

I don't just like to have 1 take, but not too many. I think it is good to keep it alive.

There are a lot of people who go through a lot of tough things, and it doesn't stop them from wanting to be a better parent.

As far as career goes, make sure you're in it for the right reasons - and make sure that the work itself is the most important thing.

I've got actor friends who didn't get breaks, who struggle and worry about things that I'm fortunate not to have to worry about.

After writing a page, Hemingway would let it float to the ground. He never crumpled pages - he believed that if you crumpled them, you'd be insane in a year.

I always used to say to myself, I'm going to die of lung cancer. That's the choice I'm making.

Acting is all about likability.