A Quote by Michael Haneke

Like every filmmaker, I make my films to reach the widest audience possible. — © Michael Haneke
Like every filmmaker, I make my films to reach the widest audience possible.
As a filmmaker, you want your work seen by the widest audience possible.
You always want your movies to reach the widest audience possible.
Also, most people read fiction as an escape - and I wonder whether my books aren't a bit too grounded in reality to reach the widest possible audience.
The movies I make - the goal isn't a mass audience. They're not expensive films. So the attempt is to reach a much more limited audience - one would say an audience that enjoys films that challenge them emotionally and intellectually.
Books like Twilight are not art. They are mass-produced crap that is meant to be consumed by the widest possible audience, for the largest possible profit.
As a filmmaker you make your films with the audience you want to attract in mind.
I personally enjoy theatre, but preferably I do films so that I can reach up to maximum audience. If you want to give a serious message, it will reach out to maximum people through films. But through theatre, you can hardly reach out to about 3,000 audience at a time.
I'm very pro presenting the best music I can to the widest audience possible.
We want to get our music out to the widest audience possible and working with a massive paper like The Mail On Sunday will definitely help us achieve that.
If we make films only for the frontbenchers, we can't make money. Hence, we have to make it for a majority audience. As my films are mass films, I deal with emotions in raw form - they are not subtle. I don't mind being branded. That does not mean I like only those kinds of films.
When I started making films, like almost every filmmaker, I think, you're just so excited to be able to make a movie that you'll do anything.
As a filmmaker, I believe in trying to make movies that invite the audience to be part of the film; in other words, there are some films where I'm just a spectator and am simply observing from the front seat. What I try to do is draw the audience into the film and have them participate in what's happening onscreen.
Before the widespread rise of the Internet and easy publishing tools, influence was largely in the hands of those who could reach the widest audience, the people with printing presses or access to a wide audience on television or radio, all one-way mediums that concentrated power in the hands of the few.
I was an audience member before I'm a filmmaker. All I've tried to do as a filmmaker was to make movies I want to see.
Some people act as though art that is for a mass audience is not good art, and I think this has been a very negative thing. I know that I have wanted very much to write books that are accessible to the widest audience possible.
'Dilwale' has increased my audience reach; I have gained in every way possible.
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