Travis Beacham Quotes

Here, we’ve compiled a list of the best Travis Beacham Quotes. The wide variety of quotes available makes it possible to find a quote to suit your needs. You’ve likely heard some of the Travis Beacham Quotes before, but that’s because they truly are great.

1
In my experience, very few people walk out of a movie.

In my experience, very few people walk out of a movie. You have them for two hours, and you‘re free to explain or not explain whatever you see fit.
Travis Beacham
2
I think my earliestStar Warsmemory that I have was from ‘Return of the Jedi.’ I distinctly remember the scene with the rancor under Jabba’s Palace.
Travis Beacham
3
I think, in general, as a writer, you can’t really hide your values. They’re always going to fall out onto the page, and I tend to trust that I don’t have to force my ideals into the expression of what’s going to happen naturally.
Travis Beacham
4
You don’t necessarily have to have your movie made to have success.
Travis Beacham
5
I love that sense of discovery. You’re experiencing something for the first time, and your parents aren’t in on it, previous generations aren’t in on it. It has a chance to belong to you and your generation in a way that nothing has. If ‘Pacific Rim‘ is a fraction of that, I would be very proud.
Travis Beacham
6
You have to be open to other people’s ideas, and you can’t be too married to your own.
Travis Beacham
7
I remember starting working on the concept and the script for ‘Pacific Rim’ with a very, very conscious decision to say, ‘I don’t want any of these big sequences to take place in America,’ because I feel like that’s become so regular to the disaster genre, and then it sort of devolves into landmark stomping.
Travis Beacham
8
Making ‘Pacific Rim’ was a lot like what you imagined making movies would be like when you were 12.
Travis Beacham
9
One of my earliest memories is seeing a ‘Godzilla‘ movie – not just my earliest movie memory, but any kind of memory.
Travis Beacham
10
That is always really fun when you get to work with a director you understand and uses references you can identify with.
Travis Beacham
11
We tend to see films as artifacts of one mind. The reality of it is, I think, when you come out here and start working, you have to learn pretty quickly that it’s a very collaborative process.
Travis Beacham
12
Where do you go after something like ‘Pacific Rim?’ Which, for me, was such a moment, to have this thing and see it all come together, and it’s big, and it has this cult following… You ask yourself, ‘What’s next?’
Travis Beacham
13
If it involved giants on any level, as a kid I was really wrapped up in that.
Travis Beacham
14
You can only see ‘Star Wars’ for the first time once, and people are watching it again and again and again, and it’s a testament to the strength beyond the plot twists that it has. The narrative strength that it has is that it can be enjoyed even though you know the biggest plot elements in it.
Travis Beacham
15
We wanted it to be that you could go to the comic shop and read about the back story of ‘Pacific Rim’ and the drama inherent in it.
Travis Beacham
16
I really fixated on any time there was any kind of monster in ‘Star Wars,’ even to the briefest second. As a kid, it really captivated my imagination.
Travis Beacham
17
The writer is just so much more intimately involved in the television process than the feature film process.
Travis Beacham
18
I think the graphic novel form works, in practice, a lot differently from watching a movie. You can put it down and pick it back up whenever you want – something you can’t do in a theater.
Travis Beacham
19
The benefit of having a story that takes place in the real world is that you don’t have to invent the real world. It exists.
Travis Beacham
20
I think that’s where the magic happens, when you get a bunch of people who are really, incredibly talented and good at what they do and very passionate about the project that they’re working on and in love with it. I think that’s when you get something that’s really special.
Travis Beacham
21
It seems so cliched and obvious, but write the movie you want to see in the theater.
Travis Beacham
22
I feel like, as an industry, we’ve gotten too dependent on source material originated in other mediums.
Travis Beacham
23
If you squint at ‘Deadwood,’ you can see ‘Game of Thrones’ coming. That’s the show that first got me thinkingCarnival Row‘ could be a series.
Travis Beacham
24
I love movies, but I would love to write as many graphic novels as people would read from me.
Travis Beacham
25
In a graphic novel, you have to allow for a certain amount of freedom on the reader‘s part to experience it how they choose.
Travis Beacham
26
A lot of screenwriters write certain characters, certain parts, with actors in mind. I don’t really tend to do that. I describe them as specifically as I can, but I don’t really picture anyone in particular.
Travis Beacham
27
Once you start putting in political subtext, it does create intellectually challenging science-fiction, but with ‘Pacific Rim,’ I always thought it would be a shame if kids couldn’t go see this movie about giant robots fighting giant monsters because it seemed to have a political point of view.
Travis Beacham
28
There’s a few things I learned from my experience on ‘Hieroglyph.’ First of all, I learned that building a world doesn’t need to be as expensive as a summer blockbuster. Yeah yeah, newsflash, I know.
Travis Beacham
29
Television has always been an appealing medium for writers to work in.
Travis Beacham
30
With bad sci-fi – sci-fi that I don’t really like – you watch it and get the impression that you’re just seeing exactly what they created because they needed it in the movie. You feel like there’s nothing more beyond that.
Travis Beacham
31
I have always been a fan of genre stuff and fantasy and sci-fi.
Travis Beacham
32
I would love to have more original material developed. ‘Pacific Rim’ has made that slightly more possible.
Travis Beacham
33
If you look, like, in 1960, there was no such thing as an astronaut. It was a totally fanciful concept, but nine years later or whatever, we were landing on the moon, which is just astonishing.
Travis Beacham
34
If I could pick any story idea or script I had that I wanted everything to go exactly right for, it would probably be ‘Pacific Rim.’
Travis Beacham
35
You have to think about space differently; you have to think about time differently when you’re talking about a graphic novel versus a movie.
Travis Beacham
36
I actually got into ‘Ultraman’ through the video games first, before I realized they were based on something. You remember how they had those fighting Ultraman video games? That’s how I got into it. Then I started watching the show. Their kaiju look so weird.
Travis Beacham
37
I think, television and comics, what’s appealing to me as a writer about both of those mediums is that they allow you to sort of let the story unfold in its own time as opposed to trying to compress it into a two-hour discreet unit of narrative.
Travis Beacham
38
As I’ve probably said before, television exposes writers to far more of the nitty-gritty than film does.
Travis Beacham
39
I do tend to be on the more optimistic end of things.
Travis Beacham
40
‘Carnival Row’ is us looking at the stranger; ‘The Curiosity‘ is the stranger looking at us.
Travis Beacham