When we get to what happens when we die, we don't have any video footage. So let's at least be honest that we are speculating, because we are.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
It's very weird about movies: you never know which ones are going to stay alive and which one are going to be meaningless. When you're there, you couldn't possibly predict it. Some things slowly die, and others slowly stay a while.
When videotape came so a lot of movies that I do have a kind of afterlife in video. Things where movies that I do would come and go; they still come and go but you can go rent them and see them on TV.
It's funny that people think because you don't have a movie or record out, you disappear into a frozen chamber someplace. They think you're dead when you're not in the public eye.
There are few things more fundamentally encouraging and stimulating than seeing someone else die.
Films and gramophone records, music, books and buildings show clearly how vigorously a man's life and work go on after his 'death,' whether we feel it or not, whether we are aware of the individual names or not. There is no such thing as death according to our view!
When we are not sure, we are alive.
Actually, I would love to make a music video. Maybe it would finally put to rest those persistent rumours that have followed me throughout my career - particularly when I was on camera performing - that I had died.
YouTube is found footage. It's here to stay, and people will always come up with new concepts that will make sense for found footage.
We see death constantly on film.
Death comes in a flash, and that's the truth of it, the person's gone in less than 24 frames of film.