The filmmakers always have a great level of control.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Unless you're the director on the movie, or putting up the money for the movie, you really don't have a lot of control.
With Kubrick and most film directors, they are in complete control, but one can influence them.
I'm fascinated with films that deal with strategy because there's a right way and a wrong way to get the job done.
All directors are control freaks and very obsessive. I get the feeling that directors as kids, they all have had a childhood with not too much contact with other kids. They constructed their own reality and they continue to do it. It's a funny breed, directors.
Being on a set where the director has lost control is just sickening. No one goes the extra mile, there's a lot of eye-rolling... it just breeds inertia. If a director is in control, the crew follow their leader. But the second anyone senses the directors are not sure, people just swoop in.
'Control' had to do with my own life a lot, and that's why that seemed to be a film I could be the director of, because I had an emotional attachment to the whole story. And because of that experience, I feel that I can try other films. I didn't set out to become a director.
As an actor, you have to give up all control to the director. He's the boss and has all the power. I'm a control freak, so that's really hard for me. Then when you see a film later, it can be infuriating, really disappointing. I've been very lucky, though, and so many of my early experiences were great.
In film work, you do the best you can under the given circumstances, but you don't have control. At least, I don't.
I've found that the more experts you have on a movie, the less control the director has.
The problem with most Hollywood movies is they don't give the director enough control.