Perhaps the most difficult thing is shooting scenes set 6,000 feet up in the mountains of Mexico.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I'd love to make another film in Mexico.
Many Mexican directors are scared to shoot in Mexico City, which is why there are many stories in Mexican cinema about little rural towns, or set a hundred years ago.
Las Vegas, New Mexico has had a lot of great movies shot there.
All these directors who do different locations forget that one room can be shot from a million different angles and a million different ways. When I direct a movie, I'm going to use that.
I know many filmmakers, and shooting in IMAX is challenging. Filmmakers love the vividness and power of those big images.
I really fight hard to make things film where they're supposed to be filmed. If something is supposed to be in New York, then it has to be in New York.
We're still working out the details, but I'd be delighted to do the film. The problem at the moment is my busy schedule. Shooting on this film has been extended by a month, but I need to be in the U.S. by Dec. 20.
I've done about 15 movies and four television series in Mexico. My last two movies were the highest grossing in Mexican-cinema history - 'Nosotros los Nobles' and 'Instructions Not Included.'
The problem with big films is they snowball very rapidly and you can never pull back. It's a pipeline that needs to be fed.
I've been to location shoots in Mexico before, and everyone ends up getting sick.
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