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AP: "Blue Jasmine," the Woody Allen film in which you co-starred, was excellent. Baldwin: But Woody's in his own universe. When what you're starting off with is "written by Woody Allen," you have a leg up on everyone else. AP: What needs to change? Baldwin: The principle reason movies fall apart is that you don't have a good director. The most anemic guild in all of the business is the Directors Guild. There are thousands of good actors out there waiting for a job. There are so many unproduced scripts that are good. The real dilemma in the business today: There are not enough good directors. There's an ocean of mediocre directors. AP: Did you learn anything new about the film business making "Seduced and Abandoned"? Baldwin: You see in the business this fetid septic tank filled with all these people, and then you turn around and there's Bertolucci, there's Scorsese. They don't let that get in their way. They have their stresses. They have their own challenges. It is not a boulevard of green lights for these people, at all. They've got their compromises. ... The people who are the heads of production of all the studios, across the board, they don't know anything about films. Nothing. They know things about selling films. AP: Are you optimistic about anything then? Baldwin: I say to myself: Thank god for ("12 Years a Slave" director) Steve McQueen. Right as you're about to collapse from a kind of cinematic starvation and dehydration, along comes McQueen. Along comes Alexander Payne. Along comes Wes Anderson. Along comes (Paul Thomas) Anderson.
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