It's a clique and I think a clique exists in every business. There's a circle of people that are guaranteed to open a movie and we all know their names and whether they're right or wrong for the role.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
A film set is really delicate and people treat you very very well if you're an actor because they want you to be as comfortable as possible for you to do your work, but it really is just one in a team of many and usually 150 people.
Well, I think that a lot of times when you're working on a film, there aren't really opportunities to get to know all the people you have to work with.
A big part of filmmaking is gathering a group of people you can work with.
Unfortunately, overall, movies are a conglomerate. People buy and sell people in this business, which can get really ugly.
I know people from working with them on films, but they're not the ones I would meet up with... I'm just a normal person!
I've always been interested in films where you can identify with the actors. Where you can be in their shoes and therefore be more involved if they're people that you recognize.
I know my audience, and they, in turn, know my cinema. When I pick a subject, it's for a family audience. I shoot and edit my films keeping them in mind. I'm dead sure about the product that bears my name.
In a lot of movies, especially big studio ones, they're not constructed in any other way than to get people to like them and then tell their friends. It's a product.
One of the nice things about the world of filmmaking is that you make friends in the business. Sometimes directors feel a script needs something, but they're not sure what it is, so they show it to a friend; if the friend is a writer, he ends up kicking around with that script for a while.
So many people are called but few serve as actors, you know what I mean?
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