[…]the top. Today, if you attempted to do such a thing, it would cost thousands. But it was fun doing those things because it had nothing to do with the script or action or what people had to do. You could just put them in, you hoped, very glamorous clothes.RL: Yes, it reminds me of a story I heard abo[…]
[…]e audience. It turned out that audiences are not willing to pay to see an optical novelty, or not more than once. What audiences require is of course script values, dramatic and emotional values. Three-D is valuable only if it adds to the image reproduction value, enables you to appreciate the drama[…]
[…]ast list, which I didn’t include in there because it never got made. And something went wrong that it couldn’t be made then, and so he came in, put a script down on the desk and said, ‘We’re making that instead. We’ve got six weeks’. So it was six weeks to prepare a big period picture, have every co[…]
[…] like that. Alan Lawson: Did they provide you with the script? David Robson: No, we had to do all that […]
[…] be made then, and so he came in, put a script down on the desk and said, ‘We’re making that […]