The way to be successful in Hollywood is to be as obnoxious as the next guy.
SYLVESTER STALLONEIf it’s not broken, break it. That’s how new discoveries are made. That’s why everything that changes life is called a breakthrough.
More Sylvester Stallone Quotes
-
-
The older I get the more things I gotta leave behind.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
Nothing’s harder than writing. There’s no comparison. With directing, you can bounce a lot of ideas around. There’s tremendous support – you’ve got editors and sound mixers. With writing, it’s all you, and it’s just crippling when people tear up your pages.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
You have to have an almost boundless reservoir of energy and interest to enter politics because quite often it’s thankless and fruitless and you can’t accomplish much.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
I think everyone has a certain kind of formula in their life. When you deviate from that formula, you’re going to fail big or you’re gonna win big.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
Artists die twice. First creatively. Then physically. The second one is the easiest.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
That’s what Rocky is all about: pride, reputation, and not being another bum in the neighborhood.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
Going in one more round when you don’t think you can – that’s what makes all the difference in your life.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
Voices are like fingerprints, from Cagney to Bogart. They never lost it. My voice is instrumental in categorizing me.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
Nothing is real if you don’t believe in who you are!
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
We do two things in life: We race the clock and everything is a struggle. One way or not, it’s a metaphorical battle all of the time.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
I’m a patriot of the heart.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
All young men want to prove themselves.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
Once in one’s life, for one mortal moment, one must make a grab for immortality; if not, one has not lived.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
I consider myself something of a raconteur. I have a rather audacious sense of humour.
SYLVESTER STALLONE -
I was very much into buying contemporary art, but I’ve just decided I want to get rid of it all. Not that it’s not great art, but all of a sudden my mood has changed, and I want to go back to seventeenth- and eighteenth-century masters.
SYLVESTER STALLONE