Chris Radtke: Are we going to see
the movies stick to the PG level of the television shows?
Triple H: Right now, that's where
we're at. We're very conscious of trying to keep it within that PG-13 genre, but
we're open, you know, Vince is smart, he's very much an entrepreneur, so everything
you're seeing we're kind of doing in our own way, and in doing that we're taking Hollywood's model and turning it a little bit. Some of it's
risky, some of it's not. I think, hopefully, some of it's going to pay off. You
know, a lot of people are watching what we're doing, especially the reduced
window for DVDs and all that stuff, you know but same thing with every aspect
of it, as far as making the movies, we're kind of reading scripts, if they're
good and we can make them PG-13 we will, if we read something and it's good,
but, well, that's definitely an R, we might still take it and put it aside, and
say let's see where we go and we might want to do this in the future.
Chris Radtke: Originally there
was a deal with FOX to distribute the movie?
Triple H: We have a DVD pipeline that's phenomenal. To be able to
take and put our stuff out there in theaters in a limited release basis
keeps our costs down. We're making lower budget, but good quality films, we're
doing it by shooting movies back to back in New Orleans, we're saving on costs of crew
and studio changes and all that stuff. We're doing a lot of things to save
stuff, shooting it faster and more efficiently, using our services that we
already have, that are our stuff so we're not paying to do it outside, and then
promoting once, as a opposed to promoting twice so we're not making a 20
million dollar film and spending 20 million to advertise and then having to
make back 40, yeah, and then spending more when the video comes out, we're
doing it one time.