I'm no relation or family connection - more's the pity - hah! - but I'm reading this superb paperback by my hero, Walter Murch.
If you read ANYTHING on film editing this year, then read this. It is just so crammed full of his ideas, sense, sensibility and understanding of editing - that to miss out on would be a major shame.
For me, on each page he is offering "permissions" on how to go about the obsessive craft of editing. He provides some stunningly clear examples of how ruthless and surgical the process can be to achieve a "finished" piece. If you can recall the memorable sea-to-beach helicopter sequence in "Apocalypse Now", comprising of shots taken from an assortment of angles and heights, the actual cutting ration was 90:1. For every 90 minutes of footage 1 minute was used. And that is "film"!
He expands on his approach to his workflow techniques and how important it is to initially get some time distance from the "shoot" to the edit. How important it is to make notes and screen and re-screen work. How ideas develop and emerge.
Walter Murch - "In the Blink of an Eye" 2nd Edition
Pub:Silman-James Press
ISBN 1-879505-62-2
Best regards
Grazie
If you read ANYTHING on film editing this year, then read this. It is just so crammed full of his ideas, sense, sensibility and understanding of editing - that to miss out on would be a major shame.
For me, on each page he is offering "permissions" on how to go about the obsessive craft of editing. He provides some stunningly clear examples of how ruthless and surgical the process can be to achieve a "finished" piece. If you can recall the memorable sea-to-beach helicopter sequence in "Apocalypse Now", comprising of shots taken from an assortment of angles and heights, the actual cutting ration was 90:1. For every 90 minutes of footage 1 minute was used. And that is "film"!
He expands on his approach to his workflow techniques and how important it is to initially get some time distance from the "shoot" to the edit. How important it is to make notes and screen and re-screen work. How ideas develop and emerge.
Walter Murch - "In the Blink of an Eye" 2nd Edition
Pub:Silman-James Press
ISBN 1-879505-62-2
Best regards
Grazie