Well, it is curious what lasts and what doesn’t. Publishing empires and whatnot would pay anything to figure it out. But they can’t figure it out. – D. A. Pennebaker
We’re actually thinking about distributing ‘Moon Over Broadway’ on-line. It’s tempting, because when you go to a major studio, it’s sort of like a farm, you know? They make all the money, since it’s kind of a buyer’s market. – D. A. Pennebaker
It was interesting to shoot history as it happens, without anyone demanding a huge story. – D. A. Pennebaker
I think, in general, independents don’t have a lot of access to really good scriptwriters or actors or actresses, so they’re very limited in what they can do. – D. A. Pennebaker
Somebody like Bowie was so interesting because when you got him off stage, he was like a businessman. But on stage, he was just dazzling. It was like watching butterflies grow. – D. A. Pennebaker
Albert Grossman called my office and spoke with my partner Richard Leacock and asked if we’d be interested in making a film with his client, Bob Dylan. – D. A. Pennebaker
I think the process is one of using the camera and sound in the way a detective uses a magnifying glass: to find the clues. They’re discovery devices, not performance devices – you’re watching things the way a cat does. You’re not judging. You’re there to witness something. – D. A. Pennebaker
I wanted James Carville to never die. I wanted Dylan, the poet, to not die. I wanted to put these people in a place where they would be inviolate. It wasn’t enough to have a still life of them. I wanted to surround them with the lives they led. – D. A. Pennebaker
Before the camera, you only had secondhand takes – someone had to tell you what they saw or draw a picture of it or sing a song. Because of the camera, sometimes to our horror, we now know everything that happens in the world – things that before we were sheltered from. – D. A. Pennebaker
Filming is a witnessing process. You don’t try to control it, even though sometimes you wish you could because it can go really, really wrong for you. – D. A. Pennebaker
Theater is where you go to find out something new that you don’t know. It goes through somebody’s brain and comes out in a comprehensible way that is beautiful, that’s really interesting. – D. A. Pennebaker
I think of all my movies as home movies! It’s just that some are more expensive than others. – D. A. Pennebaker
If you’re filming somebody doing something they really want to do, you’re probably not very high on their list of problems to deal with. You see James Carville on the phone – he’s like that whether you have a camera or not. He isn’t doing it just for you, and that’s hard to explain. – D. A. Pennebaker
If you’re setting up lights and tripods, and you’ve got three assistants running around, people will want to get you out as fast as they can. But if you go the opposite way, if you make the camera the least important thing in the room, then it’s different. – D. A. Pennebaker
I heard the new film, ‘Tangerine,’ was filmed entirely on iPhones. No cameras were involved! – D. A. Pennebaker
One of the things we found out as we filmed with people who dealt with chimps, and with all animals, and it’s really incredible, is their levels of intelligence that we don’t recognize right away. – D. A. Pennebaker
When I did ‘Don’t Look Back,’ I no longer had Time-Life looking over my shoulder, so I could kind of do it as I wanted, and it was like I was really correcting ‘Jane.’ – D. A. Pennebaker
I think the films we see, the Hollywood films, which are basically entertainment, will still be there, but they’ll be in a totally different category. People won’t take them seriously. They’ll kind of end up the way comic books have. A side view of things. – D. A. Pennebaker
When you’re editing, you’re putting it together in a way that makes sense metaphysically. You’re not inventing it, but you’re finding the story that’s there. You’re making a play that’s eventually going to go on stage and present itself to an audience. You want to show what happened, not exactly what you have evidence of happening. – D. A. Pennebaker
Two of my sons are themselves filmmakers, and we can’t afford them nor they us. They work in the real world and earn money and are pretty good at it. – D. A. Pennebaker