 It's not easy to get this across what does it mean, ecstatic truth, and what constitutes just mere fact, which is the truth of accountants. Even though one has to, we shouldn't dismiss the power of facts, because as one of the lessons says, fact create norms, and they create norms including ethical norms. And you see, for example, footage shot in concentration camps right after they were liberated. It is fact, fact, fact, and nothing but that. And it has such an immense power that it creates norms of moral behavior. So we should not dismiss that, but it's not the end of it. It's not what can be reached in cinema. There are deeper strata of truth. And you have to be inventive, and you have to fabricate, and you have to stylize, and you have to catch and try to find this elusive magic of images. And if we don't have these images, if we don't develop an adequate language of images, an adequate grammar of images, our civilization will be sort of maybe even die out like the dinosaurs. I have the feeling that we must develop adequate images, and they are limping behind, they are lagging behind. There have been such dramatic evolutions in the last past decades. And when you look at television or at much of what Hollywood does, there is something very unsatisfying, and there is a deep gap between what is us and what these images are. And so that's where we have to look out for that.