I travel, I read, I write, I have other lives. But when I have a camera, I know that's my country, my island.
I'm not a cineaste. I've made so few films. Sometimes it feels each one is the last one or the first one.
I like tragedies, whether they're sci-fi or something else, but I can't say I know much about any genre in particular.
When I made my first film, I had hardly ever seen a camera before, and I was a young man when I arrived in Paris from the suburbs. At the time, I didn't talk much. I was very shy, so the bluff served me. I was telling people that I had no money, and that I knew how to make films, but I had no proof.
Cinema is a territory. It exists outside of movies. It's a place I live in. It's a way of seeing things, of experiencing life. But making films, that's supposed to be a profession.
When I was 16, I discovered this island called cinema and I thought: 'Oh, how wonderful; I'm ready.'
I don't think men were meant to be interviewed.
I'm not especially interested in actors or their life, double, triple identities and all that.