An adage in the filmaking world has it that a movie is created three times: 1) When it is written, 2) When it is shot and 3) When it is edited.
This isn’t entirely true. Ideally the three stages should be the work of refining a core theme or idea, the act of creation should be a single ongoing event. It’s only if you are presented with footage shot by a clueless director using a poorly conceived script that you might find yourself in the unenviable situation of creating something new.
If the director has done his job properly, then the editing stage should be a process of enhancing what the screenwriter started and the director shot. Let’s assume that the best of all situations has occurred and a director has handed you a well shot set of rushes.
First log all of the footage, and I don’t mean just the bit between when the diorector shouts ‘Action’ and ‘Cut’ – watch the actors as they prepare, lookout for glances, twitches, smiles and reactions. Note these down.
You’ve done that? Right, let’s move on.
Depending on how much of a vision the director has, it should be fairly obvious where to take an edit and your first cut will be probably closest to what the director had in mind.
Even though a good director might have had the editing stage in the back of his mind while he was shooting and have a clear idea of how it will cut together, it will, in all probability, still be way too long.
Good directors love to work with actors, to encourage them to try new things and wring out the best of them. Quite often all the focus on the actors leads to a fundamental oversight; that film is a medium of moving pictures, not of dialogue.
It’s now your job to ratchet it all up a gear and make it into a proper movie, rather than a series of monologues and heartfelt interchanges.
How can we do this?
There was quite a big furore a couple of years ago when Apple introduced iMovie ’08. ‘Where have all the fancy transitions gone?’ cried frustrated videographers across the globe?’
The only real answer Apple needed to give was ‘Why should you care?’
In the world of editing there are two types of transitions that are of any use; the cut and the dissolve (and the dissolve should be used sparingly). This leaves us with the cut.
The cut! Ah, the cut. As an editor the cut is your primary weapon. The cut has the power to break a heart, to change fear to loathing in an instant, to cause grown men to cry.
The cut is all powerful! Not the images either side of the cut (though these are important) the cut itself.
For in that split second between the two images, a magic dwells.
Humans have a weakness: they have an inbuilt desire for logic and meaning. This weakness the fundamental building block of films. Take two shots, any random shots – for example a zebra grazing on the savannah and a man drinking coffee in a Parisien cafe. Show these two shots back to back to an crowd.
Every member of the audience will try to make sense of the two images they have seen. An innate paranoia kicks in and they will believe that because they are cut together, the two shots are somehow linked. Feats of mental logic will ensue as they try to form explanations for what they have just seen. And the explanations will be eminently plausible – because the audience is clever.
Even the simpler members of society are capable of watching a good film with the volume turned down and understanding what is going on. People can turn up twenty minutes into a film and still get into the story. People are smart when it comes to films.
With this in mind you can begin to edit in earnest. Look for the shots that, when cut together, say something. Rip out the five minute monologue about how much a man loved his recently departed mother and find a couple of shots; a shot of him with a tear in his eye and a gravestone. Job done.
In that brief flicker between the two shots, we (the audience) put ourselves in the man’s shoes. We wonder why he is crying, and then we see a gravestone. We work out it’s someone he cares about.We might, if we knew his name and could see the gravestone clearly, infer a more concrete relationship. We’ve all experienced loss of one type or another, and we feel empathy for the man.
Once you have your audience in the head of the protagonist, feeling empathy for him, then you are on your way to a good film.
To follow this logic to it’s conclusion all films would be silent. But this would be at the expense of our sophisticated enjoyment of clever dialogue and witty repartee. These are important, but must only be given credence if they serve the story.
A good editor will strike the balance between visual storytelling and entertaining banter, ensuring that at all times he is serving only one true master; the story. Do this and you will take the audience on an adventure, tugging them along by both their heartstrings and their minds.
But you must be ruthless. Cut the idle chatter and the banal conversation, strip out the long shots of flamingoes swooping across the sun dappled bay. It may be award winning, but if it doesn’t serve the story, out it goes. This may pain the director greatly, but if he’s worth his salt, he will understand.
Good actors understand these things. They will replace three lines of dialogue with a simple look – a gift for the editor. Not all actors are this experienced, but you can help them. Work through the Slate Roll; see if there are any useful looks or glances that the actors give. See if you can work these into the story and remove extraneous dialogue. Invite the viewer to wonder what’s going on inside the characters head, and provide clues by using a well-placed cut to another meaningful shot that explains or deepens the previous shot.
A compelling story is one that allows the audience to slip between the cuts and provide a way for their subconscious minds to play free.
I first saw Star Wars when I was five years old. I didn’t understand a word of it; Rebel Alliance, Traitors, Hermits, Smugglers. Most of it was meaningless. But George Lucas showed me a story that I could relate to; a story about a boy who lost his family and wanted help rescue a Princess. He showed me a bad guy, I saw what he did and the fear in the eyes of those around him. I got it.
Lucas invited me in, let me fall into the story, helped me empathise with the main character. As an editor it is your job to do the same with every film you edit.
There are no surefire answers, no panacea that will solve every editing quandary. The quality of the script, the skill of the director and the footage he has shot, the abilities of the actors and the requirements of the story all place demands on the editor and will all play their part.
No matter whether you’re editing a high budget thriller or a low budget feature, the same rules apply. If you can find ways to allow the audience in, to provide opportunities for them to question, to wonder, to empathise purely from what they are seeing – then your film will become more compelling.