“I think it could definitely be disturbing. It's taken the central theme and it's definitely the same story, but the elements of the book have been changed quite a lot. It's still set 30 years in the future and the conceit is still the same, that no one has had a baby anywhere for eighteen years and our reluctant hero has ended up linked with the only pregnant girl on the planet. That's still the same, but Alfonso's done a really fascinating, unusual exploration of where things could be going, and that's still very, very strong in the movie. It's a very unusual take. People are assuming it's a sci-fi movie but it's almost the opposite of that. It's like now, but worse. It's the environment we're living in. It's not futuristic. It's like things have not ended up that great and we're in a world where there are no children, which is a pretty bleak place. Half the movie's a chase movie, really, but it's in a really extraordinary vision of the future.”
Clive Owen
“I think the theme is going to be that you have to pick the winners, and I think the winners are going to be the large-cap household names, like IBM, Dell, Microsoft, Cisco, and Intel. I think they'll lead us for a little while.”
Art Hogan
“When we came in after it was tied, no one was down. I think the overall kind of theme in the dugout was, everybody loves Bobby, we're not going to let him go home feeling bad about this. We're going to pick him up and we're not going to let this happen. We're going to get this win.”
Paul Konerko
“I think the dominant theme is the extraordinary strength in the PC market and obviously the microprocessor market in the fourth quarter.”
Charles Boucher
“You can't tell any kind of a story without having some kind of a theme, something to say between the lines.”
Robert Wise
“I think by even President Bush's own standards, the themes that he used in the campaign and after, he hasn't measured up,”
Dick Gephardt
“We don't set out to have a particular theme, but sometimes certain themes emerge.”
Rick Winston