Uncover the Untold Secrets Behind Re-inventing the Western with Joe Cornet on SYS Podcast Episode 538
Ashley
Hmm. And see, as a writer, I mean, as a writer/producer, I look at, and I’m in the process of doing some casting out. This is something I don’t hear talked about. And I’m going to throw this out to you since you’re a producer, but also an actor, one of the things actors are missing in this whole thing is in the entire equation of producing a film, the actors are the most difficult to deal with. Y ou know, sag is difficult to deal with. I got my crew lined up. It’s no problem. And I do think that there’s something to be said for like, as a producer, I’m sitting here thinking, if I didn’t need to hire a bunch of actors, it would just make my life so much easier. And part of that is because actors are difficult to deal with. Now, some of it’s not their fault. I mean, you’re dealing with a lot of people and different things crew. It’s more of just, you know, mixing and you can just about put any guy in there as you’re, you know, it’s, it’s easier to slot people in and out. So I get some of that. But like you’re, you doing Westerns, I can see it would, it’s not going to be long before AI is good enough to do like a six second, you know, establishing shot of the town with some horses and some carriages and some this, and then you, and then you shoot the, the actors, the real actors in a saloon. You know, you go, you have the establishing shot and then you’re in the saloon and it’s sort of, you could get it to match up, but that’s an expensive shot. Seeing a bunch of horses go down. It’s a six section shot that costs, you know, half your budget and you can do that stuff with AI. So I think there’s going to be a sort of a marriage there where, and certainly in the next few years, you know, that that’s going to be helpful for independent producers.
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