> I'm sure it is a bummer for those people, but they were paid to do a job, and don't own the film
That's a really sad viewpoint, believing that being paid to do a job is the only thing that matters, and that it compensates everything about what that job means and how it impacts the world. It's the same thinking justifying "if I don't do this terrible thing at work, someone else will do it for the same money", which is anything but decent.
There's such thing as pride in what one does; double so in artistic endeavours, where the only value is in being seen by spectators.
That's a really sad viewpoint, believing that being paid to do a job is the only thing that matters, and that it compensates everything about what that job means and how it impacts the world. It's the same thinking justifying "if I don't do this terrible thing at work, someone else will do it for the same money", which is anything but decent.
There's such thing as pride in what one does; double so in artistic endeavours, where the only value is in being seen by spectators.