Nicholas Meyer Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Nicholas Meyer's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Screenwriter Nicholas Meyer's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 38 quotes on this page collected since December 24, 1945! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
All quotes by Nicholas Meyer: Art more...
  • Art doesn't just happen by accident. It is about pulling out new tricks and trying new things.

  • A screenplay is not a finished product; a novel is. A screenplay is a blueprint for something - for a building that will most likely never be built.

    "Screenwriters on Screen-Writing: The Best in the Business Discuss Their Craft". Book by Joel Engel, 1995.
  • Audiences may be stupid, but they are never wrong.

    Nicholas Meyer (2009). “The View from the Bridge: Memories of Star Trek and a Life in Hollywood”, p.108, Penguin
  • My father's book is about is about a number of things, but about Houdini's rage to not be a failure like his father, and it's also about converting X-rated material, namely bondage, into family friendly safe fare, which is what he did. It's also about death and resurrection, and rising to live again another day when everyone thinks you're dead.

    Source: collider.com
  • Sure you can; the only question is whether you do it well.

  • I'm mainly interested in people trying to figure s#!t out.

    Source: www.ign.com
  • The director is a bit analogous to the conductor of a symphony orchestra. It's a collaborative adventure.

  • I wrote an article not so long ago that was published in the Los Angeles Times, and I think I titled it "Movies vs. History." But I think they had another title for it. I got sort of sick and tired of seeing movies that got picked apart by people because they had taken dramatic or poetic license and I said "These people don't understand the distinctions."

    Taken  
    Source: collider.com
  • First of all, I should preface this by the observation that artists are not the best judges of what they've done and the word definitive does not belong, in my opinion, in any conversation about art. When somebody says it's the "definitive" something, I'm always recoiling.

    Source: collider.com
  • I think that the reason that people are so up in arms about movies that have historical inaccuracies is because now that we've trashed our education institutions beyond repair, people fear that the only people are getting their histories is through the movies, so the elephant in the room is that no one wants to talk about why we're so passionately obsessed with accuracy.

    Source: collider.com
  • I was always a filmmaker before I was anything else. If I was always anything, I was a storyteller, and it never really made much of a difference to me what medium I worked in.

    "Screenwriters on Screenwriting". Book by Joel Engel, 1995.
  • With a historical novel you know that liberties are being taken. Since Walter Scott, we know that poetic license, dramatic license, that events been conflated and that liberties have been taken, characters ditto, dates rearranged. But people don't seem to understand that movies are fictions, they are dramatizations, at least historical movies, and we should accord the moviemakers some of the same understanding and latitude. When you go to a movie you know it's a dramatization and not history.

    Source: collider.com
  • What I want any genre to do, what I want any work of art to do, is to illuminate the human condition.

    Source: www.ign.com
  • There are moments in one's life where you look back and you say, 'Well, I wish I had done this differently.

  • Having done, you know, science fiction, I didn't want to get trapped in science fiction. So my eclecticism was my only conscious choice. I didn't want to find myself in a niche that I couldn't get out of.

    Source: www.ign.com
  • In fact, we've entered a world which is arguably much more dangerous than [being] eyeball to eyeball with the USSR.

    Source: www.ign.com
  • I think all my Star Trek movies are very earthbound.

    Source: www.ign.com
  • So the Lincoln movie gets trashed because Connecticut voted for the amendment - not to mention how the people in Connecticut feel - but there's a lot of that. And I think it precedes from a fundamental misunderstanding of cinema. They are entertainment. And I'd like to say that entertainment isn't a synonym for disposable or mindless or stupid. Hamlet? Pretty entertaining from where I come from.

    Source: collider.com
  • When you read a history or biography you are entitled to imagine that it is as accurate as the authors can make it. That research has gone into it and we say "This is a history of the civil war, this is a biography of Lincoln" whatever. But you don't make any such supposition when you say "This is a historical novel."

    Source: collider.com
  • Roddenberry had his own utopian vision about he perfectibility of man, and I never really believed that. And I don’t think the show demonstrates that. I think it is about gunboat diplomacy. In the final analysis, the Enterprise fires. They’re always shooting and bringing civilization, and coming to worlds where they don’t approve of tyrannical enterprises – no pun intended – and they substitute their own quote unquote enlightened version of how society is supposed to work, which is essentially American.

  • I'm not really interested in the exploding car or endless sort of dystopian fantasies and superheroes. None of that... that doesn't interest me very much.

    Source: www.ign.com
  • No rock and roll ensemble, however inspired, can deliver the kind of musical variety obtainable with the resources of 110 instruments.

  • But you have to understand what that really did is that it opened these DVDs to be sources of oral history instead of puff pieces for the studio, because people involved with them being in fear of being sued by somebody, so it became another form of movie history. I mean I didn't plan it, but I'm proud that it happened. Which is probably why they didn't interview me for this DVD.

    Source: collider.com
  • What’s the difference between and actor and a movie star. An actor is someone who pretends to be somebody else. A movie star is somebody who pretends that somebody else is them.

  • Leo Tolstoy said the purpose of art is to teach you to love life. And that's what I want.

    Source: www.ign.com
  • If you look at the heroes of antiquity and myth, they all have flaws. It's something that they have to overcome; their flaws are something that they have to act in spite of. The challenge is not to defy your fate, but to endure it. That is heroic.

  • Actors will change their face, will change their hair, will change their voice, will disappear into the role. A movie star doesn't disappear.

    Biography/Personal Quotes, www.imdb.com.
  • We were extremely prescient in that we predicted the Soviet coup before it happened. That was kind of amazing.

    Source: www.ign.com
  • Art and commerce are not irreconciliable, they are inextricably intertwined.

  • The truth is that I used to read J.J. bedtime stories. He came up to me at the FOX commissary about four years ago and he said, "Do you remember what you gave me for my Barmitzvah?" I said no. He said, "You gave me the annotated Sherlock Holmes and my son is reading it now." It was the gift that kept on giving.

    Source: collider.com
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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 38 quotes from the Screenwriter Nicholas Meyer, starting from December 24, 1945! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
    Nicholas Meyer quotes about: Art