It's like many startups: spend other people's money by finding investors.
It's a bit of a semantic game, but investing != spending. Paying someone's salary is not an investment in that you don't get money back from that person, you get something of value hopefully, but not a monetary return from them. Investing in a movie or a startup has an expectation of a monetary return, so the investment is not "spent" (relevant synonyms: exhausted, consumed, depleted) by the investor.
Then whoever is actually making the movie, versus investing in it, is the one spending money. But it's not their money, it's the producers' money.
That's the problem with people needlessly going out of their way to post the tl;dr which encourages people not to read the actual source with nuance and context. Of course we won't understand.
He wrote Thrones explicitly to challenge Hollywood clichés and inject real medieval mechanics in an otherwise throbbing overblown drama. He made a bank, got a following, sold the rights, and it's not his fault that after the source material ran out, it turned to be exactly what he hated. But he's rich, lives for his hobbies. I don't think he owes anyone anything.
> He wrote Thrones explicitly to challenge Hollywood clichés
Hard disagreement on that one.
He wrote an epic story known as A Song of Ice and Fire (started in '96) that ended up getting out of hand and tied up with too many Goordian knots to complete. Sadly, we'll probably never get a conclusion to it.
Along the line, a producer came along who thought they could make money with it. First few seasons weren't terrible, but were too short to capture it all. The rest were completely rushed and unable to take on all that was going on. They went off the rails after a few seasons.
I will agree that he doesn't owe anyone anything though. My philosophy is that I create for me, if others also enjoy that, excellent.
Edit: I'm still a little bitter after going to a trivia night and losing a question because I gave the canon answer that was different from the show
So OUTSOURCE it. There are probably a thousand very talented writers that would collaborate on writing the books, coming up with plot, tracking canon, and GRR can just cruise in and edit/supervise.
Hell, you can probably train an AI to check the canon.
If he just likes being famous and making money, do that. He'll be more famous and more rich, and the people get books to read.
It's going to happen when he dies, so if he wants some say in what happens, he should do it now. Otherwise it will get Disney Star Wars'd.
And you know what? GoT will NEVER be remade the way it is. I guess he doesn't have any children, so he doesn't care.
> The cardinal rule of Hollywood is: Never use your own money
Since it wasn't explained in the opener.
I don't understand. Someone gotta put their hand in their pocket and break the rule or nothing would ever happen.
It's like many startups: spend other people's money by finding investors.
It's a bit of a semantic game, but investing != spending. Paying someone's salary is not an investment in that you don't get money back from that person, you get something of value hopefully, but not a monetary return from them. Investing in a movie or a startup has an expectation of a monetary return, so the investment is not "spent" (relevant synonyms: exhausted, consumed, depleted) by the investor.
Then whoever is actually making the movie, versus investing in it, is the one spending money. But it's not their money, it's the producers' money.
That's the problem with people needlessly going out of their way to post the tl;dr which encourages people not to read the actual source with nuance and context. Of course we won't understand.
Thanks.
He wrote Thrones explicitly to challenge Hollywood clichés and inject real medieval mechanics in an otherwise throbbing overblown drama. He made a bank, got a following, sold the rights, and it's not his fault that after the source material ran out, it turned to be exactly what he hated. But he's rich, lives for his hobbies. I don't think he owes anyone anything.
> He wrote Thrones explicitly to challenge Hollywood clichés
Hard disagreement on that one.
He wrote an epic story known as A Song of Ice and Fire (started in '96) that ended up getting out of hand and tied up with too many Goordian knots to complete. Sadly, we'll probably never get a conclusion to it.
Along the line, a producer came along who thought they could make money with it. First few seasons weren't terrible, but were too short to capture it all. The rest were completely rushed and unable to take on all that was going on. They went off the rails after a few seasons.
I will agree that he doesn't owe anyone anything though. My philosophy is that I create for me, if others also enjoy that, excellent.
Edit: I'm still a little bitter after going to a trivia night and losing a question because I gave the canon answer that was different from the show
He's the one who gave HBO permission to do so, so I do consider him ultimately responsible.
So OUTSOURCE it. There are probably a thousand very talented writers that would collaborate on writing the books, coming up with plot, tracking canon, and GRR can just cruise in and edit/supervise.
Hell, you can probably train an AI to check the canon.
If he just likes being famous and making money, do that. He'll be more famous and more rich, and the people get books to read.
It's going to happen when he dies, so if he wants some say in what happens, he should do it now. Otherwise it will get Disney Star Wars'd.
And you know what? GoT will NEVER be remade the way it is. I guess he doesn't have any children, so he doesn't care.
Apocalypse Now was financed by Coppola.
Coppola secured a lot of funding for Apocalypse from United Artists. Megalopolis still follows the rule.
(2024)