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    Sundance question: How to spend a billion dollars

    PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — The million-dollar question at the Sundance Film Festival, home of low-budget stories shot on begged and borrowed cash, is this: What would you do if you had $1 billion to make your movie?

    The Associated Press put the question to filmmakers and stars at Sundance, Robert Redford's independent-cinema showcase that opened Jan. 19 and runs through Sunday.

    The query was inspired by the Sundance premiere "Tim and Eric's Billion Dollar Movie," in which directors and stars Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim play filmmakers who squander the biggest movie budget ever and decide to rehabilitate a derelict shopping mall to pay back their menacing creditors.

    Here's what some of the Sundance crowd had to say about the notion of a billion-dollar movie:

    — Sean Penn, star of director Paolo Sorrentino's road-trip tale "This Must Be the Place":

    "This is the first time I've ever been asked to conceive of that. Yeah, I could. Is somebody offering? ...

    "I don't know. If I made a film for a billion dollars in Haiti, there'd be a billion dollars' worth of jobs that it would create and training that would create an expressive medium. But let's be very clear that we are reaching."

    — Rory Kennedy, director of "Ethel," a documentary about her mom, Ethel Kennedy, widow of U.S. Sen. Robert Kennedy:

    "A billion dollars is a little excessive. Although in today's marketplace, the truth is that you need a lot of money to make a film, and then you need a lot of money to get the film out into the world. Particularly for documentaries that are up against so many of the big films and kind of the mass-media marketplace. It's really hard to break through. So if I had that money to use on making a movie, I might spread it out to kind of lift all the documentaries up a little bit and help market them all, because I'm such a fan of documentaries."

    — Rodrigo Cortes, director of the paranormal thriller "Red Lights," starring Sigourney Weaver, Robert De Niro and Cillian Murphy:

    "A film that didn't need it, it would be a terrible idea. I mean, the right budget is what you need in order to obey the needs of your film. It's not about having a lot or just a bunch of dollars. When I did 'Buried,' I felt rich, because I had everything I needed in order to make the film moving and fascinating. That's what happened in this case, and if I had a billion-dollar movie, I better have the right story to tell with that. Sometimes, when you oversize things, you're doing the wrong thing. You spoil everything."

    — Edward James Olmos, executive producer and co-star of the hip-hop drama "Filly Brown":

    "I would make 1,000 million-dollar movies. That's what I would do. That's 1,000 stories."

    — Rapper Ice-T, director of the documentary "Something from Nothing: The Art of Rap":

    "I'd probably make a cheap $50,000 movie, and while everybody was waiting on the movie to be completed, I'd be someplace in Brazil getting my face lifted. ... You can't give me that much money and then think I'd need success. At that point, that was the win. If somehow, someone managed to hand me a billion dollars, I'd be on 'America's Most Wanted.' They'd be looking for my ass."

    — Lauren Greenfield, director of "The Queen of Versailles," a documentary about David and Jackie Siegel, whose attempt to build the biggest home in America went sour when the recession hit:

    "This film was an independent film. It was done by hook or by crook. Every trip was like, should we go, should we not go? It was a real sweat-equity kind of movie, and I feel it looks like a million bucks on the screen. ... But I'm not sure that more money necessarily makes a better product. I've certainly made commercials that are bigger budgets, that don't kind of take the dollar as far. And so, in a way, it's the same lesson as the movie.

    — Neil Young, star, and Jonathan Demme, director of the concert film "Neil Young Journeys," which played at the rival Slamdance Film Festival:

    Young: "You could make a movie about where the billion dollars went. A billion dollars is not enough, actually. We need more. That would be too low of a budget to really do a good job on that one. You need the Apple fortune. You need $76 billion to do that movie. That's how we feel about it. Jonathan and I could do that movie for $76 billion. The Apple fortune. We could make our movie about how to spend the Apple fortune to make the world better."

    — Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim, writers, directors and stars of "Tim and Eric's Billion Dollar Movie":

    Heidecker: "Wow. I think we'd give most of it to charity. That's probably the right thing to do. Because there's nothing you could do with a billion that you can't do with a million."

    Wareheim, speaking after Heidecker whispers instructions to give an altruistic answer: "If Tim and I got a billion dollars, we'd donate 99 percent to charity."

    Wareheim, speaking after Heidecker is asked to cover his ears: "I would take that money and move down to Cabo, drink some Gran tequila, get on a jet ski, get a bunch of women, a whole harem, and have a blast of a life."

    ___

    AP Entertainment Writers Ryan Pearson and Sandy Cohen contributed to this report.

    ___

    Online:

    http://www.sundance.org

    What do you think?

    If you had free money to spend on yourself, what would you buy?

    An experience, like a vacation An object
    18%

    11 people have answered this question.

    82%
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    29 comments

    • A  •  Palm Beach Gardens, Florida  •  26 days ago
      I would start with helping our veterans, especially for building them homes, getting them jobs, and all the psychiatric needs AFTER ALL, without our veterans, you would NOT EVEN HAVE A CHOICE, WOULD YOU?
    • james n  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  26 days ago
      Didn't Redford just come out the other day and say Sundance was all about the 99%?
    • Dick Hertz  •  26 days ago
      I wonder how much of our tax dollars go to subsidizing the movie and music industries.
    • T. Roll  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  26 days ago
      It would involve me, Salma Hayek and a desert island.
    • LisaC  •  26 days ago
      I would send a million people to screenwrighting school. Maybe then we could get something out of Hollywood other than trashy remakes of other trashy films.
    • Paul  •  Wichita, Kansas  •  26 days ago
      Asking movie stars their best way to spend a Billion is almost as bad as asking congressmen......
    • Mike  •  26 days ago
      Don't ya' just love Hollywood? They're trying to figure out how to spend a billion dollars on a movie while ripping the 1%! What losers...
    • Todd  •  Miami Beach, Florida  •  26 days ago
      It would be very simple, I'd just turn it over to our U.S. government to produce. I'm sure it would still be way over budget.
    • Richard  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  25 days ago
      A billion dollars? I'd save families' homes and feed those that are starving, right here in the USA, not #$%$ it away on Hollywood whack jobs.
    • Jazzd  •  26 days ago
      this is typical gibberish from liberal buffoons.....
    • Johnny V baby  •  26 days ago
      spend some save some. Im happy witht the basics. And donate some.
    • porpoiseboy  •  26 days ago
      based on some of the big budget movies i have seen in my life.....give most ANYONE in hollywood a billion dollars to make a movie ........ we would get an egotistic stinker.
    • Cahal the Mad  •  26 days ago
      Tim & Eric's work on "Funny or Die" is their best work. "Awesome Show, Great Job" is good, but on "Funny or Die" they are completely unrestrained. Case in point, their short story called, "The Terrys" which is from the last episode, season two, of "Funny or Die".
    • D  •  Monroe, Louisiana  •  26 days ago
      Make a documentary with a camcorder of 10,000 needy people getting 100k. That would be a better use of the money than any crap we get these days.
    • Rick  •  26 days ago
      oh please - In Hollywood that's just a warm up party of booze, drugs, and #$%$
    • CanesFan  •  Raleigh, North Carolina  •  26 days ago
      Modified to the #$%$Peter Gibbons: What would you do if you had a Billion dollars?Lawrence: I'll tell you what I'd do, man: two chicks at the same time, man.Peter Gibbons: That's it? If you had a Billion dollars, you'd do two chicks at the same time?Lawrence: #$%$ straight. I always wanted to do that, man. And I think if I were a Billionaire I could hook that up, too; 'cause chicks dig dudes with money.Peter Gibbons: Well, not all chicks.Lawrence: Well, the type of chicks that'd double up on a dude like me do.Peter Gibbons: Good point.Lawrence: Well, what about you now? What would you do?Peter Gibbons: Besides two chicks at the same time?Lawrence: Well, yeah.Peter Gibbons: Nothing.Lawrence: Nothing, huh?Peter Gibbons: I would relax... I would sit on my #$%$ all day... I would do nothing.Lawrence: Well, you don't need a Billion dollars to do nothing, man. Take a look at my cousin: he's broke, don't do #$%$
    • Neotroll2k11  •  Mt Hamilton, California  •  25 days ago
      My last crap was better than this POS. Redford sux
    • Ron  •  Beaverton, Oregon  •  26 days ago
      It was a stupid question for AP to ask, and no one actually answered it!
    • Capt AHAB  •  Cincinnati, Ohio  •  26 days ago
      I would use it to help the hungry masses, try and bring about world peace and stop global warming...SHeeit son...WRONG...I'd fly to a warm island, hire some topless dancing girls and smoke the biggest blunt money could buy...TRUTH son
    • Yorick Hunt  •  Rockland, Massachusetts  •  26 days ago
      How to spend a billion? Give it to Obama or any politician.
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