Words matter. These are the best Tom Berenger Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.

Even my agents say, We don’t know what this business is anymore.
There’s a hysterical, tired sense of humor that comes after working 14 hours a day, six days a week. I like those things because they take the pressure off the constant stress.
I feel more comfortable doing films with groups of guys. It’s a lot easier for me. There’s a difference with women: you can’t take them to dinner every night and go crazy.
Debra Winger doesn’t let anything interfere with her performance, which is the way it should be.
I don’t think a director should have any kids. I don’t even think it’s good for your physical health. Even guys in their 30s look exhausted because directors never get enough sleep. What I do is stressful enough.
Around mid-life everyone goes maniac a little bit.
This is all new to me, these re-releases. I don’t know how these things do. I don’t know if it will be people who saw it originally or young people.
Every other movie is one of those action things. I mean, ‘Lost in Space’? A bunch of good actors running around shooting at special effects on a soundstage? I took my kids to see that and felt like I was on an acid trip.
I was so exhausted after fighting for the project for five years, shooting it was like the Bataan Death March.
I got to talking to an old actor, and he had a bunch of stories about the Rough Riders.
I have family obligations and all that stuff. I get my kids six weeks in the summer, which is a real intense period of time. I’m with them every minute of the day.
To people outside, they think, Gee, that’s great. You get to go here and there. The other side of that is our expression, This is location, not vacation.
I like playing flawed characters, people who aren’t perfect.
I was kind of confused. I thought, Well, if I get drafted, I’ll go. Everybody was very concerned with it. I had friends who went. Some that came back and some that didn’t.
I’m probably satisfied with my career 80 percent of the time.
Rough Riders took 13 weeks to shoot, plus a week of training. The same guy trained us trained the cast in Platoon. Except, instead of radios, we used bugles to signal.
I came in on the tail end of the old school of Hollywood.
I’ve done about six comedies. Oddly enough, the script came to me from one of the guys in Platoon.
The Big Chill is one of those things that everybody can identify with. Between eight characters, they can pick somebody who’s somewhat like them.
I don’t care about being a star. I can do a supporting role; I don’t have to be a lead.
In this industry, the new owners prefer to kill anything they weren’t responsible for.
Most of what gets made now, you laugh your way through, go home and forget you’ve seen it.
We had training camp for a week, and we used the actual military drills of that period. We didn’t have to work out much after hours, because going up and down hills all day was a good workout in itself.
I had already done a lot of research for Rough Riders, keeping notebooks and old photographs. Some of the books were antiques for that time period, with the covers falling off.
I didn’t know how to go about preparing for the part of someone who can’t remember who he is. The frustration angle is written in, but there’s also this incredible passive state.
Take characters that Nicholson or De Niro play: they’re not always tough.
I guess if I weren’t an actor, I’d be a history professor.
My mother, sister and I watched through the windows as my father gambled.
You can’t think that you’re playing a villain, or you’ll end up with a cartoon. You have to think about him as a person and a hero.
These days, you can do a TV series for five years and all of a sudden be on top of the business. Features don’t even run in theaters very long anymore before going right to television.