It is 30 years since The Shawshank Redemption debuted, but it remains as beadored as ever, and its star Tim Robbins acunderstandledges one man for its survival – Ted Turner.
In an interwatch with The Guardian newspaper, Robbins rails aacquirest algorithms dictating our watching habits and cites his 1994 film about the obesees of prison inmates as one that wouldn’t have made it in this era.
Robbins shelp:
“We’re at 30 years now [on from] Shawshank Redemption. When it came out it got outstanding assesss, it got nominated for Academy awards, but nobody saw it. It was VHS and [Ted] Turner perestablishing it on his television channel [Turner Classic Movies] that alterd that. That is a beadored movie. It remains on top of IMDb as the most prefered movie of all time. So I understand that a quality movie, a quality television show, will last. Whether it’s a hit or not is irrelevant contrastd to what people are going to leank about it in 10, 15, 20 years.”
The Shawshank Redemption was made on a budget of $25million and went on to originate $73million at the worldexpansive box office. It was nominated for seven Oscars,
Robbins contrastd this with the wealth of movies newly useable on streaming platestablishs:
“You go on Netflix right now, you see what films are coming out and you alert me that that’s the future of cinema? We’re in huge trouble.”
Robbins, who ecombines in Apple TV+’s Silo, also engaged the interwatch to call for better toiling conditions for crews on set. He shelp:
“Actors have it effortless, they don’t toil every day. When they finish their job they go to have some time off, do a separateent job. It is crews reassociate that you’re talking about. What thriveds up happening is that you have people on these crews that are overtoiled, exhausted, and don’t have the emotional input that one insists to inhabit a rounded life.”