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Hi, my name is Tony, and this
is Every Frame A Painting
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The other day, someone asked me
to describe my editing process
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So I started talking about organizing
footage and doing selects
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And she said, "No, your actual process;
like, how do you know when to cut?"
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And I couldn't
describe it at all!
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Like a lot of editors,
I cut based on instinct
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(Kahn) "Nothing gets in
the way of the editing process...
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It's the process of your thinking.
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I don't cut from
what I call 'knowledge'.
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I have to come into it
and I have to feel it."
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It's the same way for me. I have
to think and feel my way through the edit
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So today, I'd like to talk
about that process:
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How does an editor
think and feel?
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The first thing you need to know is
that editing is all about the eyes
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More than any other factor, the eyes
tell you the emotion of the scene
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And the great actors
understand that they
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Convey more through
their eyes than through dialogue
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(Caine) "I said, 'Well, I
haven't got anything to say,'
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So he said, 'What do you mean
you haven't got anything to say?'
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He says 'Of course you've got things to
say! You've got wonderful things to say!
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But you sit there and listen, think of
these extraordinary things to say...
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"Elliot, sweetheart!"
"Mhm?"
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"Have you tried these?
These are wonderful!"
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...and then decide not to say them!
(Laughter)
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That's what you're doing!'"
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And when I'm watching footage,
this is what I'm looking for:
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Moments where I can see
a change in the actor's eyes
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Like when he's
making a decision
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Shots like these are powerful because
they work so well with other shots
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For instance, when we cut from
his eyes to what he's looking at
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It tells us, without words,
what he's thinking
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The next concept was
really hard for me to learn:
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Emotions take time
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When we watch people on screen,
we feel a connection to them
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And that's because we have time
to watch their faces before they speak
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(Speaking Chinese)
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(Door shuts)
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And time to watch
them afterwards
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Editors have to decide: "How
much time do I give this emotion?"
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So let's try an exercise:
look at this shot
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What do you feel
while watching this?
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Now let's try it again
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What do you feel
while watching this?
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Was it a different emotion?
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Editing is full of
decisions like these,
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Where four seconds
makes a big difference
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And these choices are difficult.
There are no right answers
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Some emotions play better if you
see them in a single, continuous shot
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(Speaking Chinese)
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But other emotions play
better over multiple shots,
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So you can build up
and come down
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Consider this scene, where
Luke Skywalker tests his skill
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(Breathes out)
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To make this simpler, let's just focus on
how long each shot is held for
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Notice that as we build, each shot gets
shorter and shorter towards the climax
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(Inspirational music playing)
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(R2 beeps)
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But after five shots, we hit
the peak and start coming down
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(Yoda sighs softly, sadly)
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Not only are the shots getting longer
again, they're actually held for longer
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than they were
the first time
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And this whole sequence spends about 15
seconds going up, but twice that amount
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coming down, so that we, the audience,
have time to feel Luke's failure
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(Breathing heavily)
"I can't, it's too big."
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But what happens if
you shorten this timing?
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Let's take a look at a very similar
scene, done more recently
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See if you can feel
the difference
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(Hank) You can do
it Scott, come on!
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(Ant laughs)
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(Scott) They're not
listening to me!
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Did you believe
that emotion?
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Because in this scene, Scott's
failure took 30 frames
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By comparison,
Luke Skywalker's failure
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Took 30 seconds
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People aren't machines,
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We need time to
feel the emotion,
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And if the movie
doesn't give it to us...
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We don't believe it.
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(Schoonmaker) "And I'm finding
in movies, recently, that I've seen,
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A lot of things
I don't believe.
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I think people are
sticking stuff out there
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And asking you
to believe it,
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But they're not making
you believe it."
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And making it believable
is really hard.
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(Man) "Let Red go."
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Because timing is not
a conscious process,
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You're just responding
to the fact
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That every shot has
a natural rhythm
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(Three gunshots)
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(Wood breaking)
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(Murch) "There's an in-built relationship
between the story itself and
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How to tell a story, and the rhythm
with which you tell it,
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And editing is...
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70% about rhythm."
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(Man yelling at woman)
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Sometimes the rhythm
is obvious,
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Like when the actor is doing
something really physical
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(Music intensifying)
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But other times
it's quite subtle
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For instance, the rhythm of
people walking back and forth
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Or the rhythm of a restaurant,
with cooks, customers, waitresses...
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These rhythms are closer to
what we feel in everyday life,
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And, I actually think
they're harder to edit
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But if you watch anything over and over
again, you eventually feel the moment
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When the shot
wants you to cut
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Classical Hollywood editing is
all about cutting with the rhythm
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And this is what we mean when
we say that editing is invisible
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The cut happens
so naturally
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(Man) "Now is there anything else
you'd like to know about me?"
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That you don't
notice it.
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(Man) "Would you like
to go over to my room?"
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But you don't always
have to be invisible
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Some emotions play better
if you cut in a jarring way,
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Like if someone
is agitated
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(Heels clicking on floor)
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And other moments
play better
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If you actually cut to make
the audience uncomfortable.
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(Water sizzling)
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(Schoonmaker) "One of the things Marty's
always encouraged us to do is to
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Sometimes hold just
a little bit too long...
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(Water sizzling)
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And then make a cut,
if it's justified."
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What really matters is, what
reaction you want from people
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(Two gunshots)
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Because sometimes, you can
only get that with an unusual cut
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And that brings me
to my last point:
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If editing is so instinctive,
how do you learn it?
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I only know
one way:
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Practice.
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(Murch) "And editing is very
similar to dance in that way,
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You can explain the
rudiments of dance,
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But to really learn how to
dance, you have to dance."
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You have to cut.
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And as you cut, you'll develop
a sense of rhythm and emotion
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That's unique to you.
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I've been doing it for ten
years and I'm still not there
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But whenever I'm frustrated by an edit,
I think about something Michael Khan said
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(Khan) "The beautiful
thing about editing is,
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I guess maybe
writers feel that way,
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I see all that film up there, doesn't
matter, I'm doing one piece at a time
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One scene at a time,
one cut at a time.
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And there's a lot of film,
I just do one thing at a time."
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So take it one shot
at a time,
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Because if you watch
any image,
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(Man) "You really care?"
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You'll see it has an
emotion and a rhythm
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(Woman sniffing
and breathing heavy)
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And you have
to feel...
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When...
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To...