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This One Thing Will Make Your Editing Better 

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Today I'm talking about how you can focus your editing skills on the single most important thing.
All background music courtesy of PremiumBeat.com: bit.ly/visitpremiumbeat
Do you want to learn how to start any edit like feature film and documentary editors do it? Please visit: www.secreteditinghacks.com
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This Guy is Sven, an A.C.E. Award nominee who cut for James Cameron, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and James Franco.
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My absolute favorite Film Editing Book is...
"In the Blink of an Eye" by Walter Murch: amzn.to/20ujg6B
Find out about Walter Murch's theory on the relationship of eye blinking and editing: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-0_rHsWleVmw.html
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2 дек 2017

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Комментарии : 496   
@ThisGuyEdits
@ThisGuyEdits 6 лет назад
Scenes Featured: Hell or High Water Allied Manchester By The Sea The Birth of a Nation Manchester By The Sea Couples Ballers Manchester By The Sea Flesh and Blood Hacksaw Ridge American Honey The Girl on the Train
@philosyche
@philosyche 6 лет назад
Why was the first scene so choppy (Hell or High Water I think)? Was it because of a different frame rate than that which you exported the rest of the video with, or some other reason? Thanks for the great video, btw.
@addyz73
@addyz73 6 лет назад
Not sure if it is the clip or my monitor - But the first clip, when the camera movement gets introduced it starts to look really choppy, and difficult to watch.
@zwheels654
@zwheels654 6 лет назад
Have you thought about doing an editing competition using pre-selected clips, sounds, etc? I am working on my editing chops and would totally participate.
@carrytrainer.editor3321
@carrytrainer.editor3321 6 лет назад
I saw that too... that's a clear frame rate SNAFU. Another good lesson is always watch the final render before you upload, lol. That being said, opening to Hell or High Water is still an epic long camera shot. I love the attention to detail in the background with the graffiti and crosses... must watch that movie now.
@artnature
@artnature 6 лет назад
really good!
@xingcat
@xingcat 6 лет назад
One of the things that RU-vid creators tend to default toward is taking out every pause, every quiet moment, etc., because we're told to hold the audience's attention for every single second, lest they click away. I think the idea of "breath" is really important, and when you can use it well, it'll hold people much more tightly than constant motion or dialog.
@nicolopolo77
@nicolopolo77 6 лет назад
xingcat Most youtubers follow or try to follow a TV/radio model were, yes, each second is valuable, you aren’t allowed to shut up or the audience will click away to something else before you notice. Profesional TV/radio host prepare for this with vocal training and other stuff for live transmissions- youtubers avoid that and depend on editing.
@BeyondSideshow
@BeyondSideshow 6 лет назад
Creative North is a refreshing exception to that unfortunate rule.
@nicolopolo77
@nicolopolo77 6 лет назад
For that matter, This Guy Edits also is an exception. I´d argue that both of them deal with film and have some sort of formal training. But most popular channels with casual success (dunno-Pew Pew or whoever he is) use edition as a poor man´s substitute for locution.
@BeyondSideshow
@BeyondSideshow 6 лет назад
Santiago Fernandez - Well PewDiePie mastered something completely different. Apples and oranges.
@MaxxMcGeeImpactStudios
@MaxxMcGeeImpactStudios 6 лет назад
True! I think Casey Neistat does a great job with his vlogs. He leaves out things and brings in breaks at the right moments. It's crazy how interesting he can make a vlog just by clever editing.
@apollocobain8363
@apollocobain8363 5 лет назад
One editing trick I love is having the sound of the next scene start before the visual. It highlights the sound, creates anticipation and and a sense of flow. On story telling, they say 'all acting is really reacting' so a good ending for a scene is not the last word of dialog but rather the other character's reaction to that line and you can do my sound-from-the-next-scene thing while you hold on the face of the reactor.
@whengrapespop5728
@whengrapespop5728 3 года назад
@Apollo Cobain As long as it’s not overused. I do find it interesting when I see it, though
@aarronjsymonds
@aarronjsymonds 3 года назад
Love it man
@Nob1ej0n
@Nob1ej0n 3 года назад
AKA the J-Cut. And the inverse, where the audio lingers after the video cuts to the next scene, is called the L-Cut.
@Dancing_Alone_wRentals
@Dancing_Alone_wRentals 2 года назад
I just tried that tonight.....only my video was so bad and I was lost editing that dumb luck delivered the solution you described. It made me think of two truths if life. 1) This is all fun, as it should be 2) My videos are boring anyway
@MateenManek
@MateenManek 4 года назад
"Darkness is even darker when there is some light" I love this line, and I have to remember it.
@cekiprod
@cekiprod 4 года назад
same, brotha
@sol8140
@sol8140 4 года назад
I disagree. Literally, it's obviously a false statement. Metaphorically, I find darkness easier to deal with when it is treated with lightness and humor.
@MateenManek
@MateenManek 4 года назад
Söl I think there’s more to the line when you look at it beyond its surface. Keep in mind, this is my own interpretation. If you look at dark comedies, I think the darkness of it is a lot more prevalent because the lightness of the humor is constantly at battle with it. Jojo Rabbit, one of my favourite movies, shows the grim reality of the Nazi era through comedy. But I find this line also poetic in a sense: when there is a shred of hope or goodness, the darkness seems a lot stronger. Almost because our reality is aware of light. Whereas if there were no hope or goodness, the darkness seems normalized and almost accepted.
@sol8140
@sol8140 4 года назад
@@MateenManek Fair enough, good points
@jamespoule8813
@jamespoule8813 3 года назад
Same here. My thinking was that the screenwriter had to be aware of this when that scene was written. He knew what the editor would do with it. Or was it a happy accident?
@stilox000
@stilox000 6 лет назад
The frame rate during the Hell or High Water sequence is freaking terrible, hurts my eyes
@silentwitness536
@silentwitness536 6 лет назад
youtube's bs conversion codec.
@leoandreiko860
@leoandreiko860 6 лет назад
i thought it was my computer KOFBSDAOKFB
6 лет назад
Guessing from his previous videos, this was edited using Final Cut X, which exports at a variable framerate. It automatically conforms your footage to the source media's FPS and resolution. So Sven can be forgiven for not noticing a change in frame rate throughout the video. Unfortunately, though, RU-vid does not support variable framerate, so some frames were dropped during the conversion process. This can be fixed in FCP by changing the framerate in your project settings (even after creating the project), selecting the footage on the timeline and going to the Video Inspector view and scrolling down to Rate Conform, change the Frame Sampling to "Optical Flow". It's a processor intensive task but it should look better -- not perfect by any standards, though.
@bluefi
@bluefi 6 лет назад
You should study this choppines and why it occurs. Especially if you are editing internet videos regularly. It will ruin your day at some point and it’s good to know why it occurs and how to fix it. I think that it’s probably because of different frame rates on source video material. Maybe Sven is editing in 24fps, but that clip was originally 30fps. So in order to play that clip in real time the editing software will drop frames like in every 5 frame or do similar shit like that. There are 2 fixes I have found for this phenomenon. You can slow the clip down so it does not drop frames. Slowing down is not always possible so in Premiere Pro using Optical Flow is a fix that works reasonably well.
@silentwitness536
@silentwitness536 6 лет назад
I agree. Also there are guides online that explain how best to shoot (set frame rate) if you want to upload to youtube. RU-vid's own guidelines have a bad rep for being incorrect. Vimeo suffers from the same issue.
@tocov
@tocov 6 лет назад
I'm gonna tell you the truth, TGE. I absolutely love your videos and input and they are a great help to me. But this one feels kinda void of any actual advice. Just saying "tell a story, tell a story" is basically like saying "be a good editor". Throughout the video I waited for specific ideas and techniques that I can put to practice myself to tell a story. I know you described the elements of the narrative like breath etc. But I waited for your advice on HOW to do these things better. What to keep in mind. Anyway, hope you don't take it the wrong way. I'm really a big fan.
@DaveKatague
@DaveKatague 6 лет назад
Whilst you may feel that, if you look deeper into the advice it's talking about compression and decompression. It's called Dramatic Sync Tempo vimeo.com/130666086
@kinkarobotina
@kinkarobotina 6 лет назад
this was exremely helpful!
@healthyrootsstrongwings538
@healthyrootsstrongwings538 6 лет назад
Perhaps the great teaching is exactly him making us ask the right questions to ourselves: How can we add breath and other critical moments to our project?
@CauterizeKing
@CauterizeKing 6 лет назад
Thanks for writing this comment more eloquently and articulately than I could. I wonder if we'll get a response.
@megumegii
@megumegii 6 лет назад
this so hard!
@TheGoodfella2012
@TheGoodfella2012 4 года назад
Hell or High Water is one of the most criminally under-appreciated and under-awarded movies. It is perfect.
@DavidVercettiMovies
@DavidVercettiMovies 3 года назад
Just watched it now! Brilliant. Superb camera moves and shots aswell
@bigredeyesproductions9274
@bigredeyesproductions9274 4 года назад
Thisishowitfeelswhenyoudon'tallowtimeforthemomentobefelt. This is how it FEELS to have time to feel the moment.
@glassjaw2007
@glassjaw2007 6 лет назад
I mean this is a wonderfully essay on the most difficult thing to master: editing! most filmmakers don´t know how to master this art and it´s very subtle, your description of breath reminded me of what Alan Heim said about editing in an interview of some remarkable editors: "editing is like Jazz". You go to the beat to much, you become predictable, rushed and fall into the void of hyper-rapid cutting, hence boring the viewer, you go against the beat to much, and you lose the audience attention and become boring too!. A good editing is in the middle, filmmaking is an art of pauses, emotional moments and magic! know how to hide information and revealing it in the precise moment to punch the gut of the spectator. You are one of my favourite essayist man, my hatt is off to you sir!
@kbg12ila
@kbg12ila 4 года назад
Good editing is usually knowing when to have a lot of cuts in your edits and when to have very little. It's the dance between the two that creates the right pacing to narrate the story in the best way.
@jeffoffej
@jeffoffej 6 лет назад
Best 7 minutes on narrative vs narration I've seen (maybe better than 3 years studying narrative in poetry in graduate school). Thanks for the great content--so helpful.
@user-iw3yo6sf8c
@user-iw3yo6sf8c 5 лет назад
*Notes* 1. The opening scene is what gets a person hooked. 2. Story= Narrative (plot) + Narration (how they make the plot come alive) 3. Take advantage of silence, it makes people feel stuff (sadness, happiness, melancholy, suspense etc). Don't overuse it, it will lose its meaning. It's a rythm and you should break it only intentionally. Learn how to use it. Movies used: -Hell or High Water -Allied -Manchester By The Sea -The Birth of a Nation -Couples -Ballers -Flesh and Blood -Hacksaw Ridge -American Honey -The Girl on the Train
@BehindtheBrand
@BehindtheBrand 6 лет назад
Good insights, well thought out...enjoyed this video. Thanks.
@matthagge4792
@matthagge4792 6 лет назад
That opening shot for Hell or High Water blew my mind when I first saw it, and it continues to do so today. I think it's a golden example of pure cinematography. In one shot they set up the environment, tone, pacing, and story; I get all the information I need about what the movie is, and will be about, in the first shot.
@masonthompson513
@masonthompson513 6 лет назад
"Always tell a story" is definitely the most important thing every new editor needs to keep in mind. Depending on the subject matter, the definition of "story" can completely change the pacing. I usually edit dialogue-driven comedy, where the story comes out of line delivery and people's reactions. However, I've edited a couple of dramatic shorts where the story comes from the moments between the dialogue. The first thing I do before I even start cutting is ask myself "what is this scene about?" Doing that helps me immensely. Great advice!
@storyfirstfilms5983
@storyfirstfilms5983 3 года назад
Thanks for posting - really enjoying your efficient info in these high quality videos
@shootatsquare
@shootatsquare 6 лет назад
I like how you bring up that sudden contrast of tone, like in putting a joke in during a sad moment, then bringing it straight back, although it can sometimes undercut the emotion of the scene. I think Tarentino films have the best examples of these sudden changes in tone. He usually does it by getting the viewer into a rythem of enjoying the violence, then will suddenly show a really violent/awful moment while playing it for laughs before immediately basking in the horrible and sad aftermath of that moment.
@kurtgoetzinger
@kurtgoetzinger 6 лет назад
Thanks for taking the time to put this together. I stumbled across your channel and like your style of explaining your method of editing.
@greencertifiedweb
@greencertifiedweb 4 года назад
I've watched this video countless times. I've shared it over and over. Anyone doing videos on RU-vid needs to understand this concept!
@Shotin35mm
@Shotin35mm 4 года назад
Every video that I've seen from you has been more than a great help in shaping the way I edit. Every episode is very informative and I absolutely love it. You make very compelling points and use very good examples to convey your knowledge.
@afterimage1860
@afterimage1860 6 лет назад
Been waiting for this,very informative.thank you! Keep it coming.
@ShawNshawN
@ShawNshawN 6 лет назад
Very strong analysis on why editing is crucial and how to sharpen a scene to make it pop, linger and tell the story better.
@slaingirlfound
@slaingirlfound 6 лет назад
You did a superb job telling a story about story telling. Thank you!
@ChrisProuse
@ChrisProuse 6 лет назад
This was excellent Sven - thanks for sharing! I can’t remember who said it, but someone once told me filmmaking is the subtle art of taking things away (eg, information), and letting the audience suss things out or fill in the gaps, so I tend to avoid direct or literal narration whenever possible and this felt along the same lines. Really enjoyed it, and keep up the great work!
@JoeriCreates
@JoeriCreates 4 года назад
This video is awesome. Love your work. And I realise I still have soooooooooooooooo much to learn. How exciting!
@_Gabyo_
@_Gabyo_ 6 лет назад
Good point. Also, as paradoxal as it sounds, storytelling in editing is extremely helpful when you edit content that wasn't shot with a specific story in mind, such as music videos or fashion films. Making a dynamic edit of random shots that aren't linked to one another, solely relying on the music to create emotion, is kinda boring. What's interesting is to create a dialog between these shots, to build an emotion that couldn't be felt by watching these shots separately. Transforming simple "models" into "characters" by using the orientation of their look and their attitude, making them lovers or enemies even though they're never together in the same shot. It might be very abstract for the viewer but since the editor knows what he's going for, the viewer feels the intention.
@JodyBruchon
@JodyBruchon 6 лет назад
Gabyo In most of the short films I've made to date, I have worked by exactly this method. I have a loose story which I craft while shooting and then refine through editing. It doesn't have the value of a carefully written screenplay to hold it together but it results in some surprising creative choices that may not have ended up existing in a scripted work.
@landonbolts7650
@landonbolts7650 2 года назад
Emotion, a certain drive in the main character whether it good or bad that you can see in their eyes during those little pauses
@rivenmotors7981
@rivenmotors7981 4 года назад
Gearing up to edit my feature film, I appreciate your sharing your experience(s) and wisdom.
@jjstarrprod
@jjstarrprod 6 лет назад
4:10 YES ! THIS ! THANK YOU VERY MUCH ! Pacing with breath is as important as silence in a musical composition, in order to let each note live its full life ! Thank goodness there are still some editors who understand this fundamental fact ! This single remark won you my subscription ! Props to you, man !
@carrytrainer.editor3321
@carrytrainer.editor3321 6 лет назад
Great video! I love the examples. I've found audio (music and/or sound fx) to be a powerful tool in shaping the tempo.
@Stacec03
@Stacec03 6 лет назад
I love this - thanks for the video. Really well explained and great illustrative clips too.
@bbttss20
@bbttss20 6 лет назад
love your work. keep it up!
@jusaggoldcow1125
@jusaggoldcow1125 6 лет назад
for the longest time it used to confuse me how you could be a director and not edit your own stuff. i thought i wanted to be a director but it was actually an editor that i wanted to be. all these tips were affirming because i know them intimately. i think it has a lot to do with my love for music but anyway, great video.
@robertnelson3179
@robertnelson3179 6 лет назад
Thanks, was taken aback by YOUR opening. Got my attention. Lost it a bit on the hospital scene having lost my bro recently will watch again when it has mellowed out.
@nonpareilsims
@nonpareilsims Год назад
Best editing info ever - youre changing my life!
@BozhidarGugushev
@BozhidarGugushev 5 лет назад
I still dont understand why? WHY someone will dislike an informative video like this?!
@abhijitbharadwaj5369
@abhijitbharadwaj5369 6 лет назад
I subbed to you after the first 3 shots.
@DeathbyZombiez
@DeathbyZombiez 6 лет назад
Abhijit Bharadwaj this was a great response.
@ehJoe
@ehJoe 6 лет назад
Well said, i did as well.
@awashington8447
@awashington8447 6 лет назад
Thank you Sven!!! This was very insightful and inspiring!!! I'll be watching this one a lot in the future 👍
@connorgioiafigliu
@connorgioiafigliu 3 года назад
Nice breakdown!
@DANAMIONLINE
@DANAMIONLINE 6 лет назад
I totally agree with your points in the video. When it comes to breath (spacing between lines and clips), I believe you can feel when a sequence needs to be shorter or longer depending on the effect you want on your audience. Knowing the effect you want to achieve is key to how you edit (and shoot).
@aarones4378
@aarones4378 6 лет назад
This is amazing. This is the the sort of thing that they teach at Brown University in the MFA program for Directing. The Ellipsis, the Breath, the Hook, and the Story equation. This is an awesome video. #subbed
@llomegou
@llomegou 6 лет назад
Amazing breakdown... amazing channel !
@itsjohnthomas
@itsjohnthomas 5 лет назад
Love your videos!!
@LivingSpiritism
@LivingSpiritism 6 лет назад
I love this video! You make a great point. I think sometimes I get caught up in Premiere Pro just rapidly scrolling through footage, making the cuts simply by looking at the waveforms on the dialogue instead of taking the extra time to examine each cut, play it back, then watch how the scene plays out from one shot to the next. It's like I'm editing by the numbers instead of using my heart. Then when I play the scene back there's something about it that's "off". Thanks for sharing this with us.
@clembirixl
@clembirixl 6 лет назад
thank you for that sensitive video. this is gold!!
@invi_carlos
@invi_carlos 4 года назад
Beautifully presented video. Thank you. Priceless information.
@beaunitta
@beaunitta 5 лет назад
oh, I love this! Thank you guy!
@Er1c91
@Er1c91 6 лет назад
Thank you for making this, it was insanely helpful for me just starting out with filmmaking (vlogs). Really appreciate channels like this definitely subbing 👍🏻✅
@marissabondi5585
@marissabondi5585 6 лет назад
"darkness is even darker with some light" snaps for that man, p o e t i c.
@DeltadronesBr
@DeltadronesBr 6 лет назад
Wonderful video! Thanks!
@finishthejourney4117
@finishthejourney4117 6 лет назад
Not at the level to give advice or suggestions on telling a story in the edit. But can say LOVE THIS CHANNEL AND THANKS FOR DOING IT. FINISH THE JOURNEY
@JamielPridgen68
@JamielPridgen68 6 лет назад
Write direct and edit all my own films. I never went to school for film making. I really appreciate your teachings. Thank you.
@rawunlimitedvlog7408
@rawunlimitedvlog7408 6 лет назад
Excellent example of the storytelling editing techniques by using them in making of this video!
@serhiobc
@serhiobc 4 года назад
Thank you. Very good info!!!
@HussamAbuHanna
@HussamAbuHanna 6 лет назад
you're goooood mate, im grateful I found you
@DrRussell
@DrRussell 2 года назад
Thank you, teacher 🙏🏼
@MrAMP1520
@MrAMP1520 6 лет назад
Great video as always! And yes you are a great story teller!
@AmpLabMedia
@AmpLabMedia 6 лет назад
Excellent approach to the Hell or High Water opening scene!
@tradingbadm
@tradingbadm 2 года назад
Great breakdown. Narrative and narration
@DavidMercer
@DavidMercer 6 лет назад
Thank you. Very informative. I think the music adds so much to the feeling of the scene and the build up of tension. I love it when documentaries use this to heighten drama where it might otherwise be difficult to flush out.
@lyonrichardson6657
@lyonrichardson6657 6 лет назад
Thank you for talking about "Breath" that is something i struggle with...as I tend to take the "Edgar Wright Smash Cut" approach when editing...I also used to edit Audio translations..so I was used to evening out all the spaces between works and taking out heavy breathing and mistakes.
@camcamwatt
@camcamwatt 6 лет назад
Thank you for making this video. Great tips and well put together. I like your content very much. Greetings from Australia!
@Spiritofabrand
@Spiritofabrand 3 года назад
wow- thanks so much for this
@wecansee100
@wecansee100 6 лет назад
good job. It's very useful with your break down. Thanks.
@alastair6320
@alastair6320 6 лет назад
Emily Blunt will make my editing better?
@senormojo
@senormojo 6 лет назад
Alastair Horne She’ll make everything better. Except the ending of Girl On A Train. That was just awful.
@larrycollicott8385
@larrycollicott8385 6 лет назад
Almost always.
@JordanEppersonEveryAtomPhoto
@JordanEppersonEveryAtomPhoto 6 лет назад
Yes
@sometimesnothinghappens
@sometimesnothinghappens 5 лет назад
Emily Blunt will make anything better.
@Krafty
@Krafty 4 года назад
Emily Blunt could piss on your toilet seat and make it better.
@hush4749
@hush4749 6 лет назад
I just spend a day and a night on your videos,and....man....I swear....you don't understand how much you help other people who wants to start in this industry.You're a really warm,and wonderful guy,who give us a good explication on EVERY thing we need to know.In fact...the only thing that matters to someone,it's to start....And...with your help , it's extremly easy, because you have a really nice style of make me understand exactly what I need to know.And there's many many more good things to say about you and your stuff,but I hope you know your key points better then everyone...I just LOVE that...people like you actually exist.Thank you so so much [^_^] P.S: You just killed my brain with those words : "Because darkness,is even darker when there is a light" ....you just opened another world for me..... By the way,you're the single person that i watch , and don't want to miss ANY word.... Keep up the good work [^_^] (and sorry for my bad english) :)) Good luck in everything [^_^]
@FilmmakerTery
@FilmmakerTery 6 лет назад
Good tips! Thanks as always
@karvalio
@karvalio 4 года назад
Wow, such a good content! Thanks bro! awesome work!
@ThePlaceForThings
@ThePlaceForThings 6 лет назад
LEARNED A LOT HERE. THANK YOU
@MikeDownes
@MikeDownes 6 лет назад
Valuable. Thanks I should watch more of your stuff..
@TheTechVault
@TheTechVault 6 лет назад
Amazing video tips. Thank you!!
@twsvnsx
@twsvnsx 3 года назад
Thank you!
@daddyinspanish
@daddyinspanish 3 года назад
As a young editor, I have come to realize that one of the biggest factors to great storytelling is a establishing an environment. I truly appreicate this video because it makes me reflect back to my more beginner days, where I didn't know much about great storytelling, and to only see have far I understand the mechanics of storytelling now.
@cascadesdefrance
@cascadesdefrance 6 лет назад
Excellent and very interesting subject and video. Thanks
@crazyfruitbatjpn
@crazyfruitbatjpn 6 лет назад
Thank you! I felt I learned quite a bit from this
@CoolerFlixLtd
@CoolerFlixLtd 6 лет назад
I thought this video was exceptional. Very thought provoking; you've given me a lot to think about and gained a new subscriber. Thank you.
@resolving_boris
@resolving_boris Год назад
My first video after I lost my corporate gig was a tribute to my Dad, who'd just passed away. One part that still gives me chills is when the background music stops right when my niece gets to her most emotional part.
@FergbyFive
@FergbyFive 6 лет назад
Great points within. Thanks Sven! There's something Fargo-esque about that Hell or High Water scene. I just had to go back and watch it again :)
@livetravelasia
@livetravelasia 6 лет назад
Damn. Mind blowing information considering I always take out all the pauses... have appreciated breath but never realized I have been until I saw it explained here. Definitely subscribing
@IJustLoveStories
@IJustLoveStories 6 лет назад
I'm an animation student. The school I study at gives us a lot of freedom to explore every part of film making, and because we work with small teams and super tight (half a year at most) deadlines, we're often fulfilling the role of director, producer and editor at once. Editing and directing are a bit unique in those circumstances. Every frame is expensive, nothing comes for free and everything has to be very thoroughly planned ahead. Most of the editing has to be done in the storyboarding phase to ensure our time is spent right and our priorities are clear. Of course you can't really know if an edit will work if you don't have the final footage, and oftentimes if it doesn't there isn't a lot of room to fix it. The footage is very tightly bound to a particular moment, and there is never enough time to create more footage. I wish we could have a workflow where we can just make excess footage, and give the editor the ability to make real decisions based on the real material.
@anurandev7337
@anurandev7337 6 лет назад
Touche. Been working on a little project by myself on a three month deadline and it's been an absolute nightmare getting things right. As for the pipeline, there do exist tools which can allow us a lot of breathing room, but most of it is simply proprietary tech at big studios and the rest are just too out of budget.
@MarkEhlen
@MarkEhlen 6 лет назад
1) do some pre-vis. after storyboards, minimally block the camera and elements of the shot in 3d, then render out the viewport. roughly v.o. dialogue or important sounds, then edit together your pre-vis clips like its final footage. this lets you play with editing while the 3d work is cheap 2) yes, like you said, it can be good to leave a tiny bit of extra footage on either side of the shot for more control during editing. This adds a bit of extra work, but its actually easier than going back and needing to change countless 3d elements at a later date. Or even worse, edits that ruin the tempo or narrative are chosen because the editor couldn't easily visualize the right cut
@IJustLoveStories
@IJustLoveStories 6 лет назад
Yeah, that's usually how we tackle it, keeping the editing a constant process. It's just that lighting and animation can change a shot entirely, and if you've watched it evolve it can be very tough to see that an edit doesn't work anymore. That might just be inexperience though.
@tonylouisvisionvideography3469
Sounds very interesting. Wish you all the success
@enilenis
@enilenis 6 лет назад
I work in VFX and we're the punching bag when it comes to bad acting, directing and editing. Often the choice of cuts simply doesn't work, but filming is long done. Wrapped. There's no going back. And in panic mode, producers start piling onto post production, because that is one area where they believe early choices can somehow be altered. We joke about "make acting good" type of visual effect. We constantly argue with editors, because they have the power to ruin a good project. Nothing is worse than fighting with a cut that simply doesn't work.
@andrelousada
@andrelousada 6 лет назад
Sooo good !!!!!! I am loving your work.
@joselperez9384
@joselperez9384 6 лет назад
WoW! This video just make me want to edit! Thanks!!!
@silvestrossouthernitaly9795
@silvestrossouthernitaly9795 6 лет назад
as always, this is great, very insightful. As in writing, editing is the puppeteer, the writer or filmmaker the puppet.
@MrGUSGUS2
@MrGUSGUS2 6 лет назад
Great informative clip, thanks for taking the time.
@nickbedford
@nickbedford 6 лет назад
Editing with the right beats, pauses and appropriate use if various techniques has been something I've strongly pushed myself to understand. Great video with some top insights. I find a lack of breathing room to be a common problem. People can't handle constant information two hours no matter how much an action film wants to think people can.
@falconawesomeness1141
@falconawesomeness1141 4 года назад
I always like the correct use of reaction shots.
@amberpj7610
@amberpj7610 6 лет назад
This is really cool to think about because I never before pictured editing as storytelling I thought of that more as the writers or directors job but obviously that is not the case.
@filipdziuba3398
@filipdziuba3398 6 лет назад
Nice examples, the breath as you said is important and also lack of its when we edit a tense scene. I also take for granted words of Walter Murch about editing by actors’ blink rate, i find it really helpful!
@pccarrera
@pccarrera 6 лет назад
Nice stuff!
@tianalinden
@tianalinden 6 лет назад
Great video. thank you
@Lumencraft-
@Lumencraft- 6 лет назад
Very good video. Thank you.
@theartofstory9487
@theartofstory9487 6 лет назад
This is GREAT!
@eddystepmahlangu1307
@eddystepmahlangu1307 6 лет назад
Thank you for sharing
@tuesdayevenings
@tuesdayevenings 6 лет назад
Great video!
@jbm-samomico2297
@jbm-samomico2297 5 лет назад
great stuff thank you ....
@HasanKhan20
@HasanKhan20 6 лет назад
Thank you. Subscribed
@user-ns1zp8wz2g
@user-ns1zp8wz2g 6 лет назад
Great video, I'm going to be taking up digital cinematography online at full sail. This was really helpful. I can agree, I judge a movie on how it opens and if their dialogue is meaningful and believable.
@sandeepmates
@sandeepmates 6 лет назад
Extremely helpful Thanks for sharing 👌
@KeigoMoriyama
@KeigoMoriyama 6 лет назад
Thanks for the video! Interesting!!!
@joshdiditt
@joshdiditt 4 года назад
I Love this channel so much
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