A Quote by Karl Glusman

It's expensive to shoot on film. — © Karl Glusman
It's expensive to shoot on film.

Quote Topics

Production-wise, it is difficult to shoot an entire film in the U.S. It's logistically difficult, as getting permission takes time, and it is also expensive to shoot there.
I shoot very little film. If you just do coverage you're shooting any number of potential films instead of just one, and I was shooting just one specific film. Film is cheap but time is expensive.
I came back to Haiti after the earthquake not to shoot a film, but to help and be a part of the rebuilding process, like all my fellow compatriots. I didn't come to shoot a film, but I became frustrated when I realized that my help was kind of useless. We all felt lost and helpless. And it's out of that frustration that I decided to shoot a film.
Summer blockbusters are very expensive to make. They have things that have to be expensive, such as 600 effects shots or CG characters that have to go a certain way, or a film design that is different but expensive.
I come from the school of thought that feels that if you can shoot film, you should shoot film.
Make film, shoot film, run film. Do something. Make film. Shoot anything.
I would love to shoot on film, but you can't really shoot a lot of footage on film, and you can't print a lot of it.
On 'Game of Thrones,' we always shoot away from the green screen because it's bloody expensive to shoot green screen.
I became passionate about nature filmmaking when I graduated from UCLA, and one of the things I always wanted to do was shoot really high quality film, so I got into time-lapse photography - so that means when you shoot a flower, you're shooting, like, one frame every twenty minutes, so that's basically two seconds of a film per day.
You know when I shoot with digital capture, I look for the mistake. When I shoot with film I embrace it.
Shooting against greenscreen... my choice of filming is, like, I'd rather shoot on location than shoot on a set, and I'd rather shoot on a set than shoot against greenscreen. You start stripping away the layers of reality, and it becomes a lot less fun to actually film.
When I am shooting a film I never think of how I want to shoot something; I simply shoot it.
Usually, I have in mind what I want to do. I shoot pretty economically, so I'm not shooting tons of stuff that I could change, all that much. I'll cut something or add a little something back, but not too much. This is maybe the producer part of me, but I'm always worried about the budget, so I shoot what I know I need to shoot for the film.
There's a film you write, there's a film you shoot, and there's a film that you cut - and they're all different.
'Housefull' is just a 40-45 crores film. It was never an expensive film to begin with.
The digital revolution has changed the way we do things because you're not under that pressure that film is precious and film is expensive.
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