That's the thing about leaks: sometimes they aren't misinterpreted or false. They're real story elements that the filmmakers were hoping to introduce to the audience in a darkened movie theater.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
That's the thing about leaks: sometimes they aren't misinterpreted or false.
As filmmakers, we're constantly always looking for something to bring the audience deeper into the reality of the story we're telling.
The secrecy thing has gotten to be more and more prevalent in films, and maybe that's good. It's nice to go see a film and not know anything about it. Sometimes I feel like we know too much about films.
The filmmakers have a story they want to tell, and they go get the material they need for it. The film either exceeds or fails to meet up to their expectations or it's different.
Other filmmakers make their movies and put them out and that's that. For me, for some odd reason, it goes deeper than that.
Audiences aren't fools - their judgement really is important. And the true heroes of films are the investors. They take the risk, after all.
Truth is quite constricting, in a way. You endlessly see at the start of a film 'This is a true story'.
In film and television we are oftentimes so pampered that the truths are withheld.
You know, when people talk about filmmaking and the techniques of filmmaking, we use them all the time in network television news in order to make our stories simpler, tighter and more understandable to the general public.
In my experience, sometimes a movie just hits at the wrong time, gets the wrong press, or gets the wrong representation, and it gets misunderstood.