A movies plot is put together into a 10-minute movie and posted on a video site is called a fast movie.
The film company has been sued for copyright infringement.
It seems that a total of 2 billion yen will be billed for the calculation of 200 yen per video site.
This is natural, but why did it spread so far?
After all, isn’t 1800 yen expensive for one movie?
2 hours and 30 minutes of screening time has become commonplace, isn’t it too long?
Isn’t the trailer free?
As organizers of the movie-at-the-movies movement, I can’t get away from this controversy.
Just being outrageous is not enough.
My proposal is to set up a paid video site by a movie company and divide it into the first part and the second part, and make it possible to watch them for a fee of 500 yen each.
Why don’t you make it possible to watch the director’s edited fast movie for 300 yen?
Why don’t you show 6 fast movies distributed by that movie company this year at a movie theater for 1800 yen?
I would like film companies to propose new ways to enjoy movies in movie theaters.
Anyway, movies these days are so long that I want intermissions and toilet breaks in between, like Indian movies.
Like Kabuki, we eat Shokado bento lunches at long intervals.
Like an opera, you can have a glass of wine in between breaks.
Anyway, movies these days are long.
The reason why you can’t cut in editing is that with digital cameras, you no longer have to pay for film like you used to.
I think that the lack of editing ability of the director is why I can’t cut it.
It’s human nature not to be able to cut the performance of an actor who is performing enthusiastically, but that’s the same as selling flattery to the actor.
I think that bold cuts are the director’s competence.
That’s why I didn’t want to be a director.
The director’s cut version that has been around is a resurrection of cut scenes from the film that were commercially too long.
On the other hand, I would like you to watch the director’s cut, which has been edited to 100 minutes.
I’m not buying a movie by its run time.
You don’t buy a book just for the number of pages.
For those who watch it, you can concentrate for 45 minutes.
Over 90 minutes, sleeping in between.
That’s probably what TV is thinking about.
It seems to be a contradiction, but if there is a 10,000-yen screening of the entire Starford movie for two days on Saturdays and Sundays, I will definitely go see it.
I miss the all-night 3-movie screening at the masterpiece museum.
Pulse oximeter 97/99/99
Blood sugar 234 Body temperature 36.2 degrees
Last night I had steak, soba pasta, vinegared wakame cucumber, milk and oranges.
Solitary Gourmet
CEO Yasunari Koyama