Well that's the point: People don't normally take away things from films anymore. You go and see a $100 million film, half an hour later, your biggest concern is what are you going to be eating.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
It's very tempting to over-eat all the bad things when you're on a film set.
I don't see me doing $100 million films because $100 million films, the very nature of them, you need to offend as few people as possible just to make your money back.
Even on a $100 million film, people will complain that they haven't got enough money and enough time, so that's always going to be an element in filmmaking.
The film business creates a large amount of waste, and I'm not immune to waste in the business.
Don't make your living with cinema because Hollywood will take you, will eat you, will destroy you. This is the reality. You have a good picture, have success, you take the person and they destroy you.
Unfortunately, overall, movies are a conglomerate. People buy and sell people in this business, which can get really ugly.
Film-making is not liberating. It drains a lot out of you, and it's fulfilling only temporarily. It's a very thankless thing at times. When you're spending all that time on a film, you don't want 40,000 people to see it - it's just not enough. You dream of more.
I guess, you make a big studio film, you spend a lot of money on it and you hope people go see it. It's really risky.
Movies are an expensive business.
I'll never do a film because it's a massive budget and I'm gonna get lots of publicity for it and it will bring something else.