Denmark is like a big family of people.

None of my movies are autobiographical.

In a way, our family is our modern identity.

Parents can shape a child, but a great teacher can, too.

I think there's a misconception of my wanting to do dark stuff.

Oftentimes, reality is much worse than what you can put in a movie.

We always want to find good and bad guys, and I don't believe in that.

If you look at children's stories in fairy tales, they're pretty brutal.

I think it's extremely difficult consistently being a decent human being.

I never have particular actors planned when I'm in the process of writing.

Having done a Dogme film taught me the beauty of simplicity and austerity.

A lot of people who live in Denmark will understand Danish but not necessarily speak it.

For me, grief is a static thing, and my movies have an extremely dynamic sort of movement.

You don't have to go very far away from Scandinavia to realize what an idyllic society it is.

If I go home from a day of shooting, and I haven't at some point felt the magic, I'm really frustrated.

There are certain things you cannot accept. There are certain things that human beings cannot tolerate.

At some stage in most people's lives, things turn upside down, and nothing is as you expected it to be.

John le Carre's 'The Night Manager' is a relentlessly exhilarating thriller with profound emotional depths.

I did learn a lot from 'Things We Lost in the Fire,' but I've learned different things from different films.

I've had a very fortunate, very privileged life. I say it with all humility because it could change tomorrow.

Women, nowhere in the world, have the kind of important position in society in the amount that they ought to have.

I think possibly, as an artist, you're always treated with a certain respect but also with a certain sort of nervousness.

Dogme is like leading a religious life, in that you are freeing yourself from making certain choices. It makes life easier.

I think the lack of automatically feeling, 'Yes, the future is going to be like the present' - that is very much a Jewish thing.

I generally edit quite heavily. In general, there aren't many scenes that are sitting where they sat in the script in the final form.

I'm a huge fan of Richard Curtis - there's real grief, real compassion in his films as well as cheekiness; it's a wonderful cocktail.

I have this almost obsessive desire to whomever is close to me: I want to have a very intense, close, intimate relationship with them.

The foundations of our lives are far more fragile than we think. So we are severely shaken when life turns out to have a will of its own.

I don't feel that I'm strictly Danish; I don't feel that my sense of humor is strictly Danish or my human sensibility is strictly Danish.

People don't necessarily do evil deeds because they want to; people happen to do something with horrible consequences even if they meant to be kind.

A significant number of women who have been ill or had marital issues feel they have no value, and society is so keen on telling us that's the case.

My favorite hobby is matchmaking. It's a lot easier to do it in movies then in real life because in real life, people don't do what I tell them to do.

For years, whenever I'd been travelling and came back to Copenhagen, I'd think: 'People are so stylish.' And it's not any one class. It's everyday life.

I would say I'm basically interested in human beings, and I don't really care whether they're men or women. I think my comprehension is about the same for both.

I think most of my films all have a certain tone or intensity in them. They are tense, and you kind of anticipate some kind of catastrophe, but you're not quite sure.

I think it is kind of depressing how few female filmmakers there are. I think it is in general depressing how few women there are in ... important positions in society

Any creative process is about being in a territory which isn't secure, isn't necessarily familiar, and isn't convenient in any sort of way. And that's the excitement of it.

There are good and bad movies, and long ones, and pretentious ones, and fun ones, and it's kind of healthy not just being able to switch off after ten minutes, but have patience.

There were 10 or 15 years where all the Scandinavian movies were gray and light brown. I got really bored with it. I really felt that movies had to have that life of vivid colors.

I'm extremely straightforward. And I can't do that sort of traditional girl thing of saying one thing that actually means something else. I never understood it, and I still don't understand it.

I guess I strongly feel that we cannot pretend that the Third World is not part of our world. We cannot say 'OK, there's that problem over there, let's just close our eyes' - we cannot do that.

I hate when the sun is high and there are no shadows. If I could do super high-budget movies, I would only shoot when the sun starts to get low - but you can't just shoot for four hours every day.

For the Oscars, I had a speech in my hand, and I just knew if I opened the piece of paper, I was going to be unable to read it. So I just thought, 'I'm going to say, as coherently as I can, whatever I can.'

In a way, the whole notion of a blueprint of a building is not that different from a script for a movie. A sequence of spaces, which is what you do as an architect, is really the same as a sequence of scenes.

I think that being Jewish has generated an extremely strong sense of the importance of family. If I look at my Scandinavian colleagues, they don't have that urgency about family. All my movies are about that.

I think the good thing about Dogme is that it forces you into an extreme sense of reality because there's no artificial light and no set design and all of those icings on the cake that you usually have on a movie.

I don't know that there's more bullying or whether it's just more talked about. It seems to me that possibly that there's been a lot of bullying all the time, but at the moment, it's something that people are talking about.

The main thing as a director, you always want to have a bit of a worry about the material you're going to get yourself into. You want to be a bit scared of it so that you have that excitement of having to climb the mountain.

I believe in rules. I believe in artistic limitations, and I always have. I've always thought that setting out a set of rules before you start, and then being completely consistent with them, is the only way to make a really good film.

I am very close to my family, and there's something life-affirming about that. Even if you feel completely different from them and have totally different views on politics and ethics, you're still family and have that immediate acceptance.

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