The danger of that statement is subjecting yourself to fate and letting things go according to how it has unfolded to you - if things go really bad and will affect a lot of people, not only you, who's to blame but you and not fate? Very dangerous a thought.
Everything from the director's choice of direction to the dialogue affects the film's outcome, may it be so indirectly or directly. If the-- let's say editing-- is not assiduously worked on, the audiences will render the film altogether "lacking professional quality". If the lighting is bad, the audience may see parts of the scene that do not convey that certain moment's best emotion and, again, quality. The thematic content <em />is the story; if the audiences do not like the story, then they won't make the effort to see the film. The film's quality largely affects the interpretation and experience of the film-- both before, during, and after the movie's viewed completion. Something as little as moving the center camera two inches toward the left wing may result in the failure of the scene.
If you need any more answers regarding film, please don't hesitate to let me know.
Hello!
Here's how you can get landscape mode on Microsoft Word:
<span><span>
First select the pages or paragraphs whose orientation you want to change. Then c</span>lick PAGE LAYOUT > Page Setup dialog box launcher. Now i<span>n the Page Setup box, under Orientation, click Portrait or Landscape. After that, </span>Click the Apply to box, and click Selected text and your done!</span>