I'm not an Internet person that reads behind-the-scenes stuff. I see a trailer, and if it looks good, then I go. That's that.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
You can fool a person into going to see a movie with a good trailer.
This is my first experience working in a foreign movie, but the mechanics, I think, are pretty much the same all over; you still have to wait in the trailer.
I don't read the reviews, the blogs, or anything else. Instead, I feel the audience when I show the film.
I'm one of those crazy people, if I'm watching the trailer for a movie and I'm really excited by it, I'll turn it off because I don't want to know anything. I want to be surprised because I love that more than knowing anything.
I don't like to go to the movies to see violence or some kind of spy thing with all kinds of information you have to assimilate to understand the plot.
If you have skills to pull off even a four-hour film, people will go and watch it.
When you go into a film, you read it, and something clicks for you, and you like it, and you sign on for it; you go for it. You know that this is going to be a good film, and that is your best hope. Past that, it's a crap shoot - you roll the dice.
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.
Go see it and see for yourself why you shouldn't go see it.
I don't watch movie trailers. I just go to the movie, and I don't know anything about it, because that's the only way I appreciate the movie fully.