Certain scenes get cut, time is 'compromised' and the final 'product' suffers. Often, this is blamed on the creators (yours truly) and not the half-hearted production that took the script, chopped it up and spit it out in a slimy filth. But whatever, right? It happens all the time; every day.
Still, I wish 'compromise' would be reevaluated for the good of the viewer; you, me and everybody who ever gave a damn about anything worthwhile.
However, a little music and some wine cool my nerves. I watch an episode of "The Sopranos" and silently hope that one day HBO will come knocking on my door; they don't know what 'compromise' means because, well, they don't do it.
4 comments:
Brilliant! Well spoken.
oh no...
not ollie right!?
i will slap a ho.
swear to god.
ah HBO...
Jordan, this is Kyle. Found you from your myspace. I thought this Bresson quote might make some sense given this post:
“My movie is born first in my head, dies on paper; is resuscitated by the living persons and real objects I use, which are killed on film but, placed in a certain order and projected on to a screen, come to life again like flowers in water.”
I think compromise is what will make whatever you're working on come alive. I'd love to hear how stuff is going. Shoot me an e-mail.
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