A film goes through so many hands, that by the time it's done, it might not resemble what you thought you were making.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
If you stay true to your ideas, film-making becomes an inside-out, honest kind of process.
Making a film is like putting out a fire with sieve. There are so many elements, and it gets so complicated.
Film is the toughest one for me, as there are many fingers in the pot, so it can be disappointing. However, to have your work seen on such a large scale, that's a very exciting prospect.
Making a film, every film, is a big gamble, large or small. The more that you do it, the more you're aware of that.
When you come to do the film, it is not the time to wonder why you do it. It's just how to do it.
When you're making a film all by yourself, that requires you to have quite a bit of a point of view in order for anything to get done.
I just think that the collective experience of going to see a film is something you can't recreate.
There is no sense in making a film that no-one will go and see, just to create a perfect, but useless, work of art.
I think there are way too many films made, and I've probably made way too many films.
But I'd be lying if I didn't say that every time you go to make a film, you're desperate to either do it better than you did it last time or to not repeat yourself.
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