But their gravity is money. Which is fine, just go ahead, but I don't feel much a part of that because of all the other bullshit that comes with it. It's a political movement basically, coming with all the complications, all the bureaucracy and all the accountants. It's like the guy who did The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (2008) I just happened to be in Poland, doing a small film that I wrote and directed in Warsaw [Warsaw Dark (2009)], and there's a party for "Narnia 2", like, the opening, I don't know what. And the guy comes up to me and says, "Chris, I'm going through hell." And I say why, and he says "278 million dollars budget. It's not a film, I'm dealing with accountants the whole time, it's all about the money. After this," he says, "I'm not gonna do anything over 30 million dollars!" [Doyle laughs uproariously] Like that was nothing! But we're gonna struggle in the trenches, because ultimately I think how many bloody remakes of things can you watch? That's going to shift, the demographic will shift, and then those poor fuckers will have to come back to us. It's happened always: it happened in the '60s in American film, you have Easy Rider (1969). It happened with the New Wave. You sell your popcorn and your shit, and then they'll see everyone's online watching these really great films watching made by young people in Indonesia or Burma, and fuck your special effects. And then the money people will say "oh shit, too much is happening online" and of course they have to chase the money, but by that stage the money will be us.[2014]
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