You know, I don't think anyone can teach you to become a director. We can attend film schools, but I don't believe anyone can teach us to be writers, or to become a great athlete or a great football player or a great dancer. I think that, when we're born, the gods bestow upon us certain gifts. Not everyone can run as fast as anyone else, not everyone can be as tall, not everyone can kick a football into the distance, not everyone can run like David Beckham or dance like [Russian prima ballerina] Anna Pavlova. The thing is, each one of us must try to recognize our gift, whatever it is, and then, if you're lucky, find teachers, people who can help us shape the gift we're born with. Because we're not born with anything than can be given to us - nobody can give us talent, just like nobody can take it away from us. We just have it. If we're writers, we don't learn to write - we're writers. But we're lucky to find, throughout our schooling, one or two people who are important, influential, inspiring. (...) Yes, people who teach us to use our gift, to shape it, to help direct it. That is very hard. Because, as human beings, we like to think we're all the same and we can all do the same, that given the opportunity I could be David Beckham. But the fact is, I can't be David Beckham. I'm not David Beckham and I don't have his gift. But I can do things he can't - I don't have the eyes or the reactions of Michael Schumacher, I can't do what he does, what he does is miraculous. (...) But the point is to recognize what was given to us, to try to understand it, to accept it, as limited as it may be - to accept its greatness or smallness and then try to perfect the gift you have. It takes courage, because you may not have been given much, the gods don't give everything to everyone. It's a lottery, you never know. [2005]
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