Before, I just don't think we knew how much music was out there; now with MySpace, it's really opened it up. Filmmakers have so much more choice.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The music's job is to get the audience so involved that they forget how the movie turns out.
All movies, when they're about the music business, tend to have a bit of a wide latitude in terms of how things really were.
In the end, you don't want music to be noticed as much as digested and integrated into the storytelling. And make audiences sit forward in their seats and enjoy the movie.
Music is so crucial to every film, I think.
Post-production is kind of the death of hope. The money has been spent. The grand ideas are either there or they're not there. So music oftentimes has to compensate if there are issues, or it has to stay out of the way if the movie is working really well.
Music is a very, very powerful tool that filmmakers use to sway people into emotions that they intend you to feel.
There just is exponentially more money in the movie business than in the music business. As a result there are more people involved in the creative process.
I don't believe in an annual dose of film music for the sake of it being film music. If we program film music, it will be because there is a real artistic reason for doing so.
The intelligent use of contemporary music in film has an enormous audience.
Now, it's almost impossible to go out and do a film about a new form of music.