Everything about filmmaking tries to distract you from that first fine rapturous vision you have of the film.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
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.
You may not quite understand the cinematic tricks that go behind the making of a film, but as long as you feel it, I think that's the important thing.
Nobody will ever notice that. Filmmaking is not about the tiny details. It's about the big picture.
I think it is very important that films make people look at what they've forgotten.
As soon as anybody puts anything on film, it automatically has a point of view, and it's somebody else's point of view, and it's impossible for it to be yours.
Filmmaking can give you everything, but at the same time, it can take everything from you.
I think that those are the things that you can uniquely do with film that are difficult to do anywhere else: they can bring a picture to life, give it a natural and historical context and make you feel that everything else is suddenly credible.
At the end of the day, it is about working in a good film. It's the films that you leave behind that matter.
Filmmaking is incredible introspective. It forces you to sort of examine yourself in new ways.
When I go to a film, you're taking it easy and you let things wash over you. That's what cinema's all about. You get involved in a world that's being created in front of you.