"Robert A. Heinlein - Shooting Destination Moon (Article)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Heinlein Robert A)SHOOTING DESTINATION MOON
тАЬWhy donтАЩt they make more science fiction movies?тАЭ The answer to any question starting, тАЬWhy donтАЩt theyтАФтАЭ is almost always, тАЬMoney.тАЭ I arrived in Hollywood with no knowledge of motion picture production or costs, no experience in writing screen plays, nothing but a yen to write the first Hollywood picture about the first trip to the Moon. Lou Schor, an agent who is also a science fiction enthusiast, introduced me to a screen writer, Alford van Ronkel; between us we turned out a screen play from one of my space travel stories. So we were in businessтАФ Uh, not quite. The greatest single production problem is to find someone willing to risk the money. People who have spare millions of dollars do not acquire them by playing angel to science fiction writers with wild ideas. We were fortunate in meeting George Pal of George Pal Productions, who became infected with the same madness. So we had a producerтАФnow we were in business. Still not quiteтАФ Producers and financiers are not the same thing. It was nearly a year from the writing of the screen play until George Pal informed us that he had managed to convince an angel. (How? Hypnosis? Drugs? IтАЩll science fiction writers who came my way with screen plays.) Despite those huge Hollywood salaries, money is as hard to get in Hollywood as anywhere. The money men in Hollywood write large checks only when competition leaves them no alternative; they prefer to write small checks, or no checks at all. Even though past the big hurdle of getting the picture financed, money trouble remains with one throughout production; if a solution to a special-effects problem costs thirty thousand dollars but the budget says five thousand dollars, then you have got to think of an equally good five thousand dollar g├╕lutionтАФand thatтАЩs all there is to it. 1 .1 mention this because there came a steady stream of non-motion-picture folk who were under the impression ~hat thousand-dollar-a-week salaries were waiting for them in a science fiction picture. The budget said, тАЬNo!тАЭ The second biggest hurdle to producing an accurate and convincing science fiction picture is the тАЬHollywoodтАЭ frame of mindтАФin this case, people in authority who either donтАЩt know or donтАЩt care about scientific correctness and plausibility. Ignorance can be coped with; when a man asks тАЬWhat does a rocket have to push against, out there in space?тАЭ it is possible to explain. On the other hand, if his approach is, тАЬNobody has ever been to the Moon; the audiences wonтАЩt know the difference,тАЭ it is impossible to explain anything to him; he does not know and does not want to know. We had plenty of bothsorts of trouble. |
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