NBCUni 9.5.23

Category Archives: documentary

Life in Tandem: Making an Unexpected Documentary

Though poignant and beautiful, this wasn’t the documentary the filmmakers originally set out to make. Here we talk with one of the directors, Mia Grimes, about how the film unfolded and the process of making it.

L-R: Chris Multop, Joe Litzinger and Mia Grimes

How did you come up with the idea for the short?
My co-director Joe Litzinger discovered a viral YouTube video of Marc Ornstein performing a canoe dancing routine to “Lady in Red” as well as a video of Stephen Colbert poking fun at it. Intrigued by the sport and the individual in the video, we did some research and reached out to Elaine Mravetz, a pivotal figure within the community. We were immediately struck by her warm and inviting demeanor.

Tragically, just days after our initial conversation, Elaine was killed in a car accident. With the blessing of both the freestyle community and Elaine’s family, we pivoted the documentary to follow her husband, Bob (also a canoeist), on his journey of recovery and grief.

The original concept was to take a Best in Show approach to a unique sport, but it evolved into a heartfelt emotional story about a community rallying around a member facing a tragic and unimaginable life change.

Did you guys fund it on your own?
My co-director funded the short through his production company, Interesting Human Media, using personal funds. While we attempted to raise additional money, the unexpected nature of the life event we were documenting meant we had to adapt and tell the story with the resources available to us while it was happening.

And we received a great many contributions of time, resources and work at reduced rates from friends and co-workers, embodying the essence of this project as a true labor of love and a community coming together for a common purpose.

What was the process of just getting it off the ground?
In early February 2022, cinematographer Jeff Smee and I made our way to film at Bob’s house in Cleveland. This initial three-day filming session with Bob was just the first of many. Over the course of the following year, we were invited to document a series of significant events marking Bob’s journey of recovery. These events offered a lens into his resilience and his gradual return to the activities that once brought him joy.

It was during a trip to Florida in February 2023 that we witnessed Bob return back to the water in his canoe for the first time since his accident — a symbolic act of reclaiming his passion and a step forward in his healing process. This experience provided a natural and powerful conclusion to our film, capturing the essence of human perseverance and the support of a community rallying around one of its own.

Can you talk script?
Because we were following an event, we did not have a script or outline of any kind, as we were not sure how Bob’s recovery would progress. We truly had no idea how the documentary would end pretty much the entire time we were filming.

Was this your first time directing? How did you work with your co-director, Joe?
I started out in logistics and scheduling, but my role quickly expanded as I found myself involved in all aspects of the production process. This transition marked the beginning of a learning experience that extended far beyond my initial responsibilities. Joe, who served not only as my boss but also as my co-director, played a pivotal role in this evolution. In an industry where the hierarchical structure is often rigid, Joe’s decision to trust me with the direction of early scenes was indicative of his inclusive leadership style.

This opportunity allowed me to learn directly from Joe and the cinematographer, Chris Multop, about not only the technical aspects of filmmaking and camera operation but the storytelling.

As the project progressed, our partnership evolved into a collaborative co-directing effort. This collaboration was not limited to just Joe and me; Chris, our co-producer, was integral as well. Together, the three of us functioned as a cohesive unit, with each of us bringing our own perspectives, expertise and visions to the table.

How did you decide on the cameras you used?
To capture the sport’s beauty, we needed high-quality, versatile cameras that were also light, portable and affordable. Most of the documentary was shot using Z cameras in 4K, with a mix of ultrawide, stylistic lenses for interviews and 800mm lenses for paddling and cinematic shots. Other cameras we used during production were Sony FX3, multiple drones and a Blackmagic camera.

Was it shot with natural lighting?
While the canoeing scenes benefited from natural lighting, we used artificial lighting for the indoor interviews to enhance the visual quality.

You had multiple DPs?
Chris Multop, our co-producer, served as the director of photography, but it was a collaborative effort, with Joe, Jeff Smee, me and others on-set contributing to the cinematography alongside archival footage from the canoeists.

You edited on Adobe Premiere. What was that process like?
We have edited a variety of projects on a variety of platforms. We decided on Premiere because we liked the ease and capability of sending the project to multiple editors to play around with.

One of the things we did early on was hire an experienced AE, Ken Ren, who organized the drive and synced the footage, so our projects started in a way that gave us a leg up throughout the editing process. With about 8TB of footage, we relied on proxies to keep the editing process smooth.

Who did the actual editing? And what about the audio and color grading?
Editing was a collective effort led by Joe and me, with contributions from Emmy award-winning editors Matt Mercer and Eric Schrader and assistant editing by Jenny Hochberg. We set out to film a feature, so we were managing a large amount of footage, which presented a significant challenge in crafting a short, concise documentary.

You can watch the doc here:

Zach Robinson on Scoring Netflix’s Wrestlers Docuseries

No one can deny the attraction of “entertainment” wrestling. From WWE to NXT to AEW, there is no shortage of muscular people holding other muscular people above their heads and dropping them to the ground. And there is no shortage of interest in the wrestlers and their journeys to the big leagues.

Zach Robinson

That is just one aspect of Netflix’s docuseries Wrestlers, directed by Greg Whiteley, which follows former WWE wrestler Al Snow as he tries to keep the pro wrestling league Ohio Valley Wrestling (OVW) going while fighting off mounting debt and dealing with new ownership. It also provides a behind-the-scenes look at these athletes’ lives outside of the ring.

For the series’ score, Whiteley called on composer Zach Robinson to give the show its sound. “Wrestlers was a dream come true,” says Robinson. “Coming into the project, I was such a huge fan of Greg Whiteley’s work, from Last Chance U to Cheer. On top of that, I grew up on WWE, so it was so much fun to work with this specific group of people on a subject that I really loved.”

Let’s find out more from Robinson, whose other recent projects include Twisted Metal and Florida Man (along with Leo Birenberg) and the animated horror show Fright Krewe

What was the direction you were given for the score?
I originally thought that Greg and the rest of the team wanted something similar to what I do on Cobra Kai, but after watching the first couple of episodes and having a few discussions with the team, we wanted to have music that served as a juxtaposition to the burly, muscular, sometimes brutal imagery you were seeing on screen.

Greg wanted something dramatic and beautiful and almost ballet-like. The music ends up working beautifully with the imagery and really complements the sleek cinematography. Like Greg’s other projects, this is a character drama with an amazing group of characters, and we needed the music to support their stories without making fun of them.

What is your process? Is there a particular instrument you start on, or is it dependent on the project?
It often starts with a theme and a palette decision. Simply, what are the notes I’m writing and what are the instruments playing those notes? I generally like to start by writing a few larger pieces to cover a lot of groups and see what gauges the client’s interest.

In the case of Wrestlers, I presented three pieces (not to picture) and shared them with Greg and the team. Luckily for me, those three pieces were very much in the ballpark of what they were looking for, and I think all three made it into the first episode.

Can you walk us through your workflow on Wrestlers?
Sometimes, working on non-fiction can be a lot different than working on a scripted TV show. We would have spotting sessions (meetings where we watch down the episode and discuss the ins and outs of where the score lives), but as the episodes progressed, I ended up creating more of a library for the editors to grab cues from. That became very helpful for me because the turnaround on these episodes from a scoring standpoint was very, very fast.

However, every episode did have large chunks that needed to be scored to picture. I’m thinking of a lot of the fights, which I really had to score as if I was scoring any type of fight in a scripted show. It took a lot of effort and a lot of direction from the creative team to score those bouts, and finding the right tone was always a challenge.

How would you describe the score? What instruments were used? Was there an orchestra, or were you creating it all?
As I mentioned earlier, the score is very light, almost like a ballet. It’s inspired by a lot of Americana music, like from Aaron Copland, but also, I was very inspired by the “vagabond” stylings of someone like Tom Waits, so you’ll hear a lot of trombone, trumpet, bass, flute and drums.

Imagine seeing a small band performing on the street; that’s kind of what was inspiring to me. This is a traveling troupe of performers, and Greg even referred to them as “the Muppets” during one of our first meetings. We also had a lot of heightened moments that used a large, epic orchestra. I’m thinking especially about the last 30 minutes of the season finale, which is incredibly triumphant and epic in scope.

How did you work with the director in terms of feedback? Any examples of notes or direction given?
Greg and producer Adam Leibowitz were dream collaborators and always had incredibly thoughtful notes and gave great direction. I think the feedback I got most frequently was about being careful not to dip into melodrama through the music. The team is very tasteful with how they portray dramatic moments in their projects, and Wrestlers was no exception.

There were a few times I went a bit too far and big in the music, and Greg would tell me to take a step back and let the drama from the reality of the situation speak for itself. This all made a lot of sense to me, especially because I understood that, coming from scoring mostly scripted programming, I would tend to go harder and bigger on my first pass, which wasn’t always appropriate.

More generally, do you write based on project – spot, game, film, TV — or do you just write?
I enjoy writing music mostly to picture, whether that’s a movie or TV or videogame. I enjoy it much more than writing a piece of music not connected to anything, and I find that when I have to do the latter, it’s incredibly difficult for me.

How did you get into composing? Did you come from a musical family?
I don’t come from a musical family, but I come from a very creative and encouraging family. I knew I wanted to start composing from a very young age, and I was incredibly fortunate to have a family that supported me every step of the way. I studied music in high school and then into college, and then I immediately got a job apprenticing for a composer right after college. I worked my way up and through a lot of odd jobs, and now I’m here.

Any tips for those just starting out?
My biggest piece of advice is to simply be yourself. I know it sounds trite, but don’t try to mold your voice into what you think people want to hear. I’m still learning that even with my 10 years in the business, people want to hear unique voices, and there are always great opportunities to try something different.

NBCUni 9.5.23
Sugarcane

Sundance: Sugarcane DP Christopher LaMarca

The Sundance documentary Sugarcane follows the investigation into abuse and missing children at an Indian residential school, which ignites a reckoning on the nearby Sugarcane Reserve. It was directed by Julian Brave NoiseCat and Emily Kassie and focuses on the intergenerational legacy of trauma from the residential school system — including forced family separation, physical and sexual abuse, and the destruction of Native culture and language.

Sugarcane

Christopher LaMarca

The film’s director of photography was Christopher LaMarca, who took the time to walk us through his process on the film.

How early did you get involved on this film?
I was involved with Sugarcane from day one of production. The film was shot over the course of two years.

How did you work with directors Julian Brave NoiseCat and Emily Kassie?
Emily was also a cinematographer on the film, and we shot side by side throughout production. Direction on a verité film is very tough because things are happening in real time. It’s important that the directors’ and the DP’s instincts are aligned visually, tonally and energetically. You need to be able to communicate in high-pressure situations without words. Without this depth of connection, this immersive style of filmmaking falls apart quickly.

Are there some bits that stick out as more challenging than others?
The most difficult thing about shooting verité is maintaining the visual voice of the film while simultaneously running sound and having the stamina to stay present when the world around you is in constant flux. The locations, lighting and characters’ movements are always unpredictable.

Christopher LaMarca

Director/cinematographer Emily Kassie and I worked closely with our colorist Marcy Robinson to dial in the look we had established in-camera during production.

What was it like working with Marcy?
Marcy is amazing. We had established a look during production that she was able to accentuate and strengthen throughout the grade. A lot of our time together was spent finding the depths of our blacks and pushing the digital image toward the feel of film.

Can you talk lighting?
When shooting a verité film, one must embrace the available light of each scene, whether it’s the sun or an overhead fluorescent light. We were often shooting way before sunrise and after sunset, capturing every ounce of blue- and golden-hour light each day. We used artificial light very sparingly and only to accentuate the available light when needed.

Sugarcane

Sugarcane

What did you shoot on and why?
Our A camera was a Canon C500 Mark II. (B camera was a Canon C300 Mark II). We selected the C500 Mark II for its full-frame sensor, low-light performance, modularity and ability to run four channels of audio. We chose not to have a dedicated sound person, so we ran audio in-camera throughout production, which wouldn’t have been possible without this camera. The majority of the film was shot on 35mm f1.4 and 50mm f1.2 Canon L-series prime lenses.

Looking back on the film, would you have done anything different?
Films like this are a rite of passage. We never sacrificed our vision or broke down as a team, even in the most unrelenting moments. I wouldn’t change anything.

Finally, any tips for young cinematographers?
Find your voice by pushing through your perceived comfort boundaries. It is only through your own self exploration and discipline that you will find the skills to embrace the resistance that’s coming your way.


Skywalkers

Sundance: Shooting the Doc Skywalkers: A Love Story

The Sundance documentary film Skywalkers: A Love Story focuses on a Russian daredevil couple — Ivan Beerkus and Angela Nikolau — who, in an effort to save their career and relationship, takes a journey across the globe to Malaysia to climb the world’s tallest skyscraper at the time, called Merdeka, and perform a dangerous stunt on the spire.

Renato Borrayo Serrano

Director Jeff Zimbalist, who also wrote the film and co-edited it with Alannah Byrnes, called on cinematographer Renato Borrayo Serrano to shoot the vertigo-inducing doc, which plays like more of a heist film than a traditional documentary.

We reached out to Borrayo Serrano to talk about his process.

How early did you get involved in Skywalkers?
Director Jeff Zimbalist and [co-director] Maria Bukhonina had already established a relationship with Angela and Ivan. Things in Angela and Ivan’s relationship were becoming more serious, both in their careers and on a personal level. Jeff and Maria were looking for someone who could both develop an intimate relationship with them and shoot in a specific cinematographic style, bringing a sensibility to the depiction of the couple’s emotions. They saw my previous work and invited me to join as a DP. Back then, I was based in Moscow.

How did you work with Jeff Zimbalist? What direction were you given?
Jeff had a very specific and concrete idea of how he wanted the story to be told, using observation of real events as the main source of material and through close-ups, creating a strong emotional connection and access to the characters. A lot depended on following Angela and Ivan’s development over time and being able to show up and integrate organically into their lives while keeping the authenticity of the moment.

Reviewing the material, we would discuss a lot about the feelings of the characters and the development of the story — where we thought it was heading and what the possibilities were. We were clear that this was not just another film about extreme artists; it’s about human relationships, and the depth of their personalities needed to be depicted.

What about the color grade and colorist? What are some notes that you exchanged?
The director Jeff Zimbalist did the color. We talked about leaning into the cinematic grain, deep blacks, moderate saturation and yellow/green tints.

What did you end up shooting on and why?
It was clear from the beginning that we needed gear that would allow us to adapt to almost any unforeseen locations and situations without negatively interfering with the outcome of our characters’ lives and art. We also didn’t want to attract unnecessary attention. At the same time, we needed to achieve a cinematic feel and look.

We ended up working mainly with the Canon EOS C300 Mark II and Canon EOS C70 because those cameras are highly adaptable and can work with cinema lenses. But for the climb to Merdeka tower and many other heist-like and extreme situations, we used an incredibly wide variety of resources, spanning from GoPro action cameras to different sorts of drones, night vision cameras and remote mics and sound recording devices. Our goal was to maximize the storytelling resources on extreme, almost impossible-to-predict conditions.

What about the lighting?Skywalkers
We worked mainly with natural light, directing the sources of light when we could. Angela and Ivan are artists and have great visual sensibility, so they would understand and comprehensively react to certain proposals affecting the space they live in. They would quite naturally search for great scenery, even subconsciously.

However, we would try to minimize our intervention in space to favor authenticity. When you see the film, you can really feel how this worked on many levels, including the psychological one, to get visual access to emotions that were both authentic and cinematographic.

Are there some scenes that stick out as challenging?
There were moments of great tension between Angela and Ivan, and at some point, they had a fight. We were so immersed in their life and physically close to them that even for them it was hard to acknowledge that we weren’t choosing sides.

When you have that kind of access, in seconds you need to make the correct aesthetic decisions of framing and handle yourself correctly. An error can destroy the trust of the characters in the film and jeopardize the trust of the team. A life-changing decision can be taken only once; you either witness it with your camera authentically or not.

At moments, it became very hard — as it is in all human relationships — to navigate conflicts with neutrality. We felt great empathy for both, and they knew it. The main resource we had for navigating conflicts was the trust they had for our team. At the same time, we also needed to keep enough professional distance to be a system of safety checks and balances under extreme conditions, where an error could mean terrible consequences.

Skywalkers

Renato Borrayo Serrano

Another big challenge was to plan how we were going to portray the ascent to Merdeka. It was a real race against time, and we were very invested in how we would show it in a cinematographic way and prepare the gear for a whole range of unpredictable situations.

This is where the collaboration with Ivan was crucial. We had a small team trespassing and monitoring the situation in real time, and that team had some close calls right along with Ivan and Angela. But we always stuck to a strict safety protocol that Jeff and Maria established with Ivan and Angela and their families. We always had to be thinking about safety and story and logistics all at once.

Looking back Skywalkers, would you have done anything differently?
I would have had more physical preparation. It was a mad challenge to keep up with Angela and Ivan on the roofs.

Finally, any tips for young cinematographers?
Be real, and think about the story and the relationships of your characters above everything. If you do that, then the right technical decisions will come. Communication with your director is essential.


Documentaries

Editors’ Roundtable — The State of Documentaries

By Oliver Peters

The growth of modern streaming platforms and alternative media has ushered in a golden age for documentary films, series and short-form projects. Editors working on scripted versus unscripted projects find similarities but also major differences between these two film genres.

I surveyed a small, diverse cross-section of documentary film editors for their thoughts on the genre. These editors cover a range of experience working with award-winning directors. This editors’ roundtable includes Steven Hathaway (The Pigeon Tunnel, American Dharma); Neil Meiklejohn (Wild Wild Country, Biggie: I Got a Story to Tell); Walter Murch, ACE (Coup 53, Particle Fever); Kayla Sklar (Rams, Rise Again: Tulsa and the Red Summer); and Will Znidaric, ACE, (Five Came Back, Freedom on Fire: Ukraine’s Fight for Freedom).

Documentaries

Walter Murch

What is the difference between editing a documentary film or series and dramatic/fictional films?
Walter Murch: The real question is, is there a script before the start of production? If there is a script, it doesn’t matter if it is fiction or a doc; the editor’s job is fairly clear: to interpret the script in cinematic terms given the material.

If unscripted, then the editor’s job is different. They need to help build/discover the storyline and structure. In unscripted, there is an abundance of events but a paucity of interpretation. In scripted films it is the opposite — an abundance of interpretation, but a paucity of events. What do I mean by that? In a scripted film, the editor may have 44 different readings of one line of dialogue and four printed takes from 11 different camera angles and lenses. The decision becomes: Which line reading and camera angle are best for this moment in the film? As for the events, there are only the events (the scenes) that are in the script. This choice is restricted relative to the profusion of interpretation of line readings.

In an unscripted film, the editor has only one line reading and one camera angle for each moment in the film. But there will be many events (potential scenes) shot for the film, which may or may not be included in the final structure. It is the editor’s job to help decide which are the best scenes and in what order to put them, and then how to make the best use of framing for each single moment. Particle Fever and Coup 53 were both unscripted documentaries and had, respectively, 400 and 530 hours of material to choose from.

You can compare scripted and unscripted to two types of science: Copernican and Darwinian. Copernicus had an idea of a sun-centered universe and mined existing data to prove it. He did not make more than a few token astronomical observations himself. He had a preconceived idea to begin with and put that idea to the test. This is like having a script (a preconceived idea) and then putting it to the test of actually shooting it. Will the thing hang together? Will the weather cooperate? Will the actors deliver the goods? Etc.

Darwin, on the other hand, spent five years on an around-the-world voyage of discovery, making observations and collecting specimens. He then returned to home base and sifted through his “dailies” (so to speak) to find the underlying and animating story (evolution through natural selection). The idea emerged out of the evidence. This is like an unscripted documentary, where you shoot a lot of material and hope that a story will emerge from a careful selection of everything you have gathered.

Will Znidaric

Will Znidaric: When you start the process of editing a documentary, there is no prewritten script. It’s much more free-form, and the job of a doc editor is one of discovery. The process is unique, a wholly different type of editing. Whether it is a cinéma vérité style of production or one that leans on interview or archive or some combination of the above — you are going through all of it with an open mind.

You are pulling material that not only helps to achieve the stated concept or thesis but also expands upon, and in some cases, even changes the thesis along the way. In that sense, the thing you are working to help create is almost alive. It breathes and evolves and grows and even begins to communicate with you on its own frequency more and more as you get closer and closer to it.

Kayla Sklar: Based on my experience (and this is definitely a generalization), a narrative editor shapes how the story is told, but a doc editor shapes what story is told. Most documentaries aren’t scripted, unless you’re working on something like a Ken Burns/PBS biography project. The director may have a thesis, but what story is the footage actually telling? It’s the doc editor’s job to help figure that out and to problem-solve when those don’t align.

Documentaries

Kayla Sklar

Neil Meiklejohn: In documentary films and series, the editor is constantly writing and rewriting “the script” of the film. Most documentaries usually don’t have a clear story, so you are constantly trying to sort out what the best story is from the material you have. The words people say tend to be the driving force of that narrative. Careful arrangement of these sound bites gives you the strongest story. So as an editor, you’re essentially coming up with what the story is, along with the visuals and sounds, to establish the tone of the film as a whole and throughout individual scenes.

Narrative is fun because the script is written for you and most of the storytelling is sorted out in preproduction. You can really just focus on the tone of the piece sonically and visually. In documentaries, especially “talking head” docs, the writing is not done until post production. Each day in the edit is different for an editor. Sometimes you are more creative with sound design or working on the visuals, and some days are hard in terms of building out the film and “writing” new scenes. There are many moments when you think the story can take different directions, and sometimes you have to try a few different options.

Many times on a documentary, I will suffer from “writer’s block,” where I need to jump into a new scene or rework an old one to push on. So docs require a lot of research and development. In narrative, you may scrap a scene or two from the finished film, but for the most part, you will see most of the script in the final film. In documentaries, you will spend weeks on scenes and multiple chunks of the film that will never see the light of day. Therefore, documentaries can take significantly more time because of this trial-and-error period.

Even after the first rough assembly of, say, a true crime doc, you may realize that you need to work much more on the intrigue and mystery of an investigation or clarify things that are too vague. You are constantly adjusting how much and how little information (words or sound bites) the audience receives.

Different types of documentaries require different “writing tools.” For example, I have worked on a few documentaries that were very comedic. Even if your “talking head” subject is very funny, as an editor you spend a lot of time working on the timing and the wording of a gag or joke. In documentaries, it is significantly more difficult to edit something funny than in a narrative piece. In narrative, the writer, the script and the actor have sorted it out for you before the camera even rolls.

On many biodocumentaries, peoples’ lives are not necessarily lived in a three-act structure. Many times, you have to sort out how to create a script of this person’s life or a moment in time that will be entertaining and understandable to an audience. It is no easy task. However, this is also what makes documentary editing fun. You really have an opportunity to tell a story how you, as the editor, see it and have the freedom to try lots of different things. The world is your oyster.

Steven Hathaway

Steven Hathaway: The idea is the same: crafting the best narrative out of the source material. For me, a documentary starts with an interview. That interview is cut down to an essential state. You leave what is needed to tell the story plus maybe a few punctuating details. The same can be said for a scripted scene. You want to enter late and leave early. Build suspense and mystery, but also leave enough to follow the story. It is the basic editorial question: When is enough not too much?

In drama, there is more coverage but less overall material. It is more about finding the right takes. In documentary, one is usually cutting a 90-minute movie from maybe 100 hours of footage. So it’s less about the best version and more about cutting it down while keeping the best moments.

Many documentary editors view what they do as a form of writing. Should they be credited as co-writers?
Murch: If the doc is an unscripted one, then they should be credited as co-authors of the film. I think the editor should request that credit. This is what I did on Coup 53, and I was granted that co-writing credit. I did not request that for Particle Fever, but perhaps I should have. I did proportionately the same amount of “writing” on Particle Fever as I did on Coup 53. In the end, no one received a writing credit for Particle Fever.

Znidaric: I used to believe very strongly that a doc editor should also be credited as a writer, but now I take a more nuanced perspective. Documentary editing is truly its own art form — very much like writing in so many ways. But it’s also akin to sculpture, design, architecture and even music composition. As anyone in the editing community knows — doc or narrative — what we do is considered an “invisible art,” which makes it challenging for people to appreciate its own unique subtleties.

Yet, if a young doc editor asks me for points of inspiration to better hone their craft, I point to the same types of material that any screenwriter would go to: “The Power Of Myth” series about Joseph Campbell, books about storytelling, books about screenwriting. Ultimately, the material you are sculpting as a doc editor is all in service of telling a compelling and engaging story.

Sklar: If no one else (director, story producer, etc.) is getting credit for writing on a doc, then I don’t think it’s a necessary additional line. It’s within the scope of our duties. But I do think doc editing is definitely a form of writing. If someone can get a writing credit for punching up a script (as they should), then that’s similar to what a doc editor does to shape the director’s vision. A co-writing credit would be fair if there are other people on the doc getting a writing credit already.

Neil Meiklejohn

Meiklejohn: Most documentaries I have worked on have not had a writer, although a few have. Usually, the writer credit is given to someone that is either writing the voice-over or sitting in with the editor and honing the story. I think each film or series should be taken on a case-by-case basis, as there are different ways of creating a documentary. But I do believe if someone is getting a writer credit, then filmmakers should also not ignore the contributions of the editor.

Hathaway: I do not think of what I do in Avid as writing. I think it is closer to Tetris. If editors are writing the voice-over for a documentary and not getting credited, that is crazy. But I think story structure is part of the editor’s role, whether it is scripted or documentary.

How have modern media platforms (Netflix, Apple TV+, Amazon Prime, YouTube) impacted documentary films and series?
Murch: As Chairman Mao said when asked about the impact of the French Revolution, “It is too soon to tell.”

Znidaric: On the whole, the growth of streaming services and platforms has fueled a complete boom time for the doc medium. It would not be hyperbole to say the last decade has been nothing short of transformative as far as the doc medium is concerned.

There are many factors that come into play, including the accessibility and quality of production and post equipment. But also there are now more entities that are hungry for doc projects. That means more documentaries get funding and find distribution than would have been imagined even 20 years ago. With that naturally comes a wider spectrum of material that gets made — from more commercially viable, higher-budget projects to smaller, more idiosyncratic films/series. Ideally, there is room for an ecosystem that flourishes with a diversity of artistic voices. I am optimistic that it can only grow in the future.

Meiklejohn: For the most part, modern media has been wonderful for documentaries. Docs are no longer this boring genre of film. I think now we are seeing some of the most entertaining documentaries ever. People talk about docs around the water cooler. Documentary films and series are actually cool and popular, which is great because there are so many great projects to work on as an editor.

On the other hand, I do think their popularity has also impacted streamers and studios because now there is a sense of urgency to get the doc films out the door and into people’s homes. The schedules are now crazy-fast. In the past, filmmakers would spend years making a documentary. These days films are supposed to be produced in months. These expedited schedules can hurt the creative process and prevent you from making the best film possible.

Hathaway: For me, it’s been very good. They enable me to be a part of telling more stories and reaching wider audiences.

Sklar: There’s never been a better time to work in docs! So many doc series have entered the zeitgeist in the past 10 years, and especially since the early days of COVID-19. Who would have thought that a series about a wild cat rescuer or a cult leader would be weekly appointment television? And maybe those aren’t as “serious” as the doc genre usually tries to be, but I think it’s good for everyone when the mainstream public is open to the idea of nonfiction programming as a worthwhile way to spend an evening.


Oliver Peters is an award-winning editor/colorist working in commercials, corporate communications, television shows and films.


Tupac Docuseries Dear Mama: Director and Editor Talk Workflow

By Iain Blair

Allen Hughes, the director of The Defiant Ones docuseries about music legends Dr. Dre and Jimmy Iovine, has done another deep dive into the life and times of a hip-hop legend – Tupac Shakur. Dear Mama, titled after the artist’s hit song of the same name, the new FX five-part series streaming on Hulu explores the troubled relationship between Tupac and his late mother, former Black Panther member and social activist Afeni Shakur.

Dear Mama

Allen Hughes

I spoke with Hughes, whose credits include Menace II Society, Dead Presidents and The Book of Eli, about making the film and his thoughts on post. We also had Lasse Järvi, executive producer, writer and editor on the project, join the conversation.

You made the great series The Defiant Ones, and now this. What sort of film did you set out to make this time?
Allen Hughes: I’m a huge music fan and I always wanted to be a DJ at heart. I think music is a superpower, and if you do it right it’s more powerful than any action sequence. The Defiant Ones was more like a highly produced rock album to me. This is not a rock record. This is like a blues record to me and I had to change my whole style and way of thinking. It’s more emotional and I tried to strip it all down. It became what I call a rotating musical mosaic.

His estate gave you their blessing for the project. That must have been huge in terms of all the research and material you were able to access?
Hughes: Huge. It was the biggest gift and blessing to have that access to all his recordings. I got all the multi-tracks, all the lyric sheets and his writings – all his personal notes and thoughts, his desires and ambitions. Then we broke down all the multi-tracks and re-assembled them, and I brought his lyrics more to the forefront, and put his a cappella on top of the score, because in the editing room I always say, “If grandma doesn’t understand it, it’s gotta go.”

What were the main challenges of pulling all this together?
Hughes: Even just going through all the material was a huge challenge and then we also shot all over the place — from LA and southern California to the Bay area and the south, talking to family and friends who were there when certain events happened, and just trying to assemble all the material we needed. It’s taken almost four years of work to finish the project.

Tell us about post. Where did you do it all?
Hughes: I found this house at the very top of the Hollywood Hills and I cut the entire thing there. It wasn’t the most practical thing to do as the Wi-Fi wasn’t great and we had the server somewhere else, and we had to edit remotely, but editing and doing post there during COVID had a lot of benefits too.

Pacific Post provided the Avid Media Composers, and we had four editing bays set up. It was great. Warners MPI did the dailies and then we mixed all the sound at Number Nine Productions in another house where the sound mixer Cameron Frankley had this great home studio that was top notch.

I’ve always mixed on a backlot or at someplace like Lantana, so this was a first, but it was great, and we had a fantastic team including sound designer Robert Stambler and mixers Chris Jenkins and Sal Ojeda. I love working with all the sound and music, and it’s always been my favorite part of the whole post process.

The thing with a documentary like this is, the whole thing is basically post production, and they’re way more challenging to make than a feature film. I love post because you get to refine and refine all the material in a project like this, and then you sometimes discover magic. Josh Garcia was our post supervisor, and he did a great job of overseeing it all.

You worked with Lasse Järvi and several other editors. How did that work and how did you collaborate with them?
Hughes: The lead editor was Lasse. He’s Finnish, and he also co-wrote the whole thing with me and was an EP on it. He worked with me before on The Defiant Ones, and he’s just a brilliant editor and collaborator. And then we brought in other editors to help out, including Alex Chu, Ron Eigen, Aaron Naar and Tom Parsons.  They’d work on different episodes of the show. But ultimately it always boiled down to Lasse and me sitting down and authoring the cut.

I think there’s a difference between editing and authoring. There’s a signature here, and it’s got to feel a certain way. And when you collaborate with a brilliant editor like Lässe, I consider it a performance and treat it the same way as working with an actor.

What were the main challenges when it came to editing?
Hughes: Dealing with all the archival footage is always a challenge, and dealing with it, especially on the Afeni Shakur side, was hard. Initially, it was thought there was no material at all because no one had ever seen anything on her. And that’s where time is your friend in documentary filmmaking, because eventually we did find footage of her in her Panther years. It wasn’t a lot, but it was just enough for our film. We also found images of her, and audio, not a lot, but again, just enough.

Just going through all the material we had was a lot of work, and then making sure that the editing felt “authored,” so that there’s a purpose there and that you’re experiencing the story through the prism of Tupac and Afeni’s relationship. For me, the big editing challenge is always finding the right feeling. Me and Lässe went through so many cuts on most scenes.

For instance, at the end of Episode 2 you see this whole long run that we cut to The Spinners’ song Satan. It was a nine-minute sequence that began as four or five separate scenes, but it worked far better when we cut them all together – the speech Tupac gives in Indianapolis, the backyard scene, him getting bailed out and playing Dear Mama for the first time. But it took a lot of drafts and work to get there.

Lasse Järvi

Lasse, can you talk about the nonlinear approach and the big editing challenges for you?
Lasse Järvi: One of my favorite images of Afeni is a black-and-white photo from a fundraising event in 1970, the year before Tupac was born. Afeni was on bail, facing 360 years in prison, but she looks amazing in a black leather vest with an SLR camera in her hand, and on the camera strap are four film canisters. However, the truth is that the camera and canisters are empty. She couldn’t afford film, let alone a camera. She borrowed it for press access.

The point is, the Shakurs were impoverished revolutionaries often hiding from the law, so documentation is hard to come by, and of course we were hell-bent on painting this archive-based multipart family portrait. Considering how present Tupac still is in our society, it’s easy to forget he’s been gone longer than he lived. I never got to meet him or his mother, but everyone who did says they both radiated an unbelievable energy. They were both poets, not only in how they wrote, but how they spoke, moved, lived and even died. It was all emotion, heart, rhythm and passion infused with an incredible amount of knowledge, and our goal was to channel that spirit.

We felt the only way to do that was to make the viewer feel like they are in the room with the two, so we knew this had to be an immersive experience, and Tupac and Afeni had to be the lead voices. What’s crazy is that time and time again it seemed like they left precisely the right pieces behind for us to tell their story the way we hoped to. And the restrictions inspired a lot of the creative choices, including the nonlinear timeline.

We also knew that a chronological timeline was out of the question from a narrative standpoint, as that would mean Tupac wouldn’t enter the picture until a couple episodes in. And we were blown away by the almost eerie parallels in their stories and wanted to study how the events of Afeni’s past influenced Tupac’s actions. Then there’s the sheer magnitude and historical context of the story. You can’t understand Tupac and his writings without studying the issues he and Afeni dedicated their lives for. He viewed his art as a vehicle for social change, and he was willing to die for it. So there’s no way we were going to shortchange that message, and wanted his writings to be a major narrative driver.

Thankfully, we were blessed with unprecedented access to his entire catalog, and working with it has been an absolute highlight of my career, and a consistent source of inspiration through the process. Couple that with score from Atticus Ross and his team, and I’m in bliss.

What editing gear did you use?  
Järvi: We edited on Avid Media Composer using Jump Desktop as our remote work solution. Interviews were shot anamorphic on formats varying from 4K to 8K.
Allan, in Episode 2 you confront the violent incident with Tupac when you got beaten up after you fired him from Menace 11 Society. That must have been very difficult to deal with.
Hughes: It was, and I didn’t want to do it, but Lasse and the other producers said I had to deal with it. While I was interviewing Tupac’s old managers it came up and they went after me and it was in real time and so real that we just kept it. I hadn’t planned it at all.

Talk about the huge importance of music and sound on this.
Hughes: We began working on it from the very start four years ago and it was all about trying to find that sweet spot. How do you respect the original recording, but also give a fresh understanding of the lyrics? How do we tie this song to that scene? Or how do we use a track like Shed So Many Tears throughout a whole episode, with different mixes and then also bringing in the great score by Atticus Ross, Leopold Ross and Claudia Sarne?

In the mix it was all about finding that balance between all the songs, the score, all the a cappella, and I’m so proud of what we did. Hip-hop docs typically don’t get this level of audio treatment, and Atticus and his team are sound freaks, so they did things with the score that meant we didn’t need to add any effects or anything dramatic. It was all there already.

What about the DI? Who was the colorist, and how closely did you work with them and the DPs?
Hughes: We did it on the lot at Warners MPI in Burbank with colorist John Daro. I’m very involved and go to all the sessions, even though most of it’s very boring to me (laughs). But it’s so important and so hard to get the look just right, especially when you have a lot of archival stuff. But it turned out great.

What did you learn about Tupac that most surprised you?
Hughes: The struggle he had in his adolescence, dealing with his mother’s post-traumatic stress and her drug addiction. It makes you grow up real fast and I’ve learned to have a lot of compassion for him and his journey.

I heard you’re working on a Marvin Gaye project next?
Hughes: That’s going to happen, but first I’m doing a biopic of my dear friend Snoop Dogg for Universal. I can’t wait to start it.

Credit: All images courtesy of FX


Industry insider Iain Blair has been interviewing the biggest directors in Hollywood and around the world for years. He is a regular contributor to Variety and has written for such outlets as Reuters, The Chicago Tribune, The Los Angeles Times and the Boston Globe.


People’s Television’s Nick Trenum on Editing TED’s In the Green

Nick Trenum is supervising editor at People’s Television, a creative studio based in New York City and Washington, DC. Since joining the team in 2017, he has edited a variety of projects for clients including TED, Meta and Greenpeace.

Nick Trenum

While growing up in Northern Virginia, Trenum was always interested in filmmaking, but it wasn’t until he was enrolled at the Los Angeles Film School that he realized editing was the area that clicked with him the most. “Finding all the ways you can put the pieces together to tell a story has been an addictive process ever since,” he says.

When asked about a special project he has worked on, Trenum points to the documentary film Not Going Quietly, which follows Ady Barkan, whose life is upended when he is diagnosed with ALS. A confrontation with a powerful senator catapults him to national fame and ignites a once-in-a-generation political movement.

Let’s find out more about Trenum…

What is your process? How do you begin on a project?
The hardest thing about being a post supervisor at a company with such a diverse portfolio of content is that no process or workflow fits every project. The first thing is to collect every bit of information you can about the creative plan, the production details, the schedule, etc. Only then can you start forming the post team and workflow. Good communication is the key part of it all.

Not Going Quietly

How did you get involved with Not Going Quietly?
When I got involved, it was before we were totally sure it would become a feature. The idea was that a small team of us would join Ady Barkan on a cross-country tour to film him advocating for health care reform. My role during that time was to ride with the crew and cut videos out of the various rallies and events on the road.

When the project grew into a feature film, the videos I edited during that time were the basis for a lot of the scenes in the film. After that I did some additional editing and oversaw some of the post finishing for the final release.

Can you tell us more about your post team on Not Going Quietly? How did they come together?
The post supervisor on the project was Claudia Tanney, with Kent Bassett as the lead editor. During the final stages of the process, I worked on handling a lot of the quality control and organized some of the finishing by ensuring that our collaborators at Irving Harvey and Red Hook Post had everything they needed to finish the color grade and sound mix.

Nick Trenum

Not Going Quietly

What gear did you use on this film?
The whole film was cut on Mac computers running mostly Adobe Creative Suite.

What were some of the interesting or unique challenges you faced on the project?
Editing portably — it was a very unique workflow during the cross-country trip in the early production of the film. Basically, we would film for a day and then edit that footage from a moving RV while it drove to the next state, then repeat.

In the Green: the Business of Climate Action

What about the more recent project In the Green: The Business of Climate Action? What made you excited to work on it?
This was an episodic series of videos for TED and Amazon. Each episode features a representative of a large company like Best Buy, Amazon and Johnson Controls and highlights the various ways those organizations have adjusted their processes to be more environmentally conscious.

It was an exciting project because each episode posed a fun challenge: Take an hourlong interview that goes over so many granular details about the company’s operations, and distill it down to a three- or four-minute video that concisely delivers the message to the viewer. At the same time, you have the opportunity to learn about the inner workings of these huge organizations and their plans for the future.

Which gear was used on this project?
Each interview was filmed with a three-camera setup and a minimalist, behind-the-scenes aesthetic. We edited it entirely remotely using Adobe’s Creative Suite.

What was the collaboration on the project like? How did you foster a positive work environment and encourage collaboration among team members?
The episodes were divided up between multiple editors: Katherine Welsh, Jenny Groza and me. Moises Oliveira was our animator and created the dynamic illustrations and title treatments that were instrumental in helping each video visually translate all of the detailed concepts each interviewee discussed.

In the Green: The Business of Climate Action

This made for a highly collaborative project because each editor had the creative challenge of editing their episode to have a unique style and pace that matched their subject’s delivery. At the same time, we each had to make our episodes feel uniform with the other episodes and cohesive as a series.

There was a lot of trading assets and techniques as we all worked on multiple episodes with overlapping timelines. This specific team of editors has collaborated on so many projects before, so constantly communicating and strategizing with one another made it a really positive and educational experience for the entire post team.

What new technology has changed the way you work (looking back over the past few years)?
The most impactful change has been the development of more portable options for editing large projects. The current MacBook Pro with the M1 chip can work reliably without transcoding. It obviously doesn’t replace a powerful workstation with multiple monitors, but it’s pretty amazing that you can now effectively edit while traveling.

In the Green: The Business of Climate Action

Do you think the pandemic helped move the remote-editing process along?
Before 2020, the assumption was that a post team needs to work from one office to collaborate and work efficiently. When we all had to transition into remote work, our whole workflow and approach to collaboration was overhauled. Even now our post team spends as many days working from home as we do from our offices. We adapted pretty quickly.

What are some other projects you’ve worked on?
Greenpeace: Masks Included, Nestlé’s Plastic Monster and Equal Justice Works: Alexis & Rhakiah.

What’s next for you?
As People’s Television continues to expand and produce more and more diverse projects, I look forward to learning from each challenge that comes with that and seeing what new technologies and techniques are around the corner.

In the Green: The Business of Climate Action

Finally, what would you suggest to editors who are just starting out? Any best practices?
The best thing an editor can do when starting out is to consume as much media in as many genres and styles as possible. Old and new films, commercials, all kinds of YouTube or social media content, etc. If you’re editing a documentary, don’t just watch documentaries for inspiration. Watch narrative content too because you end up pulling from all kinds of videos when deciding on pacing or building scenes.

You can also learn a lot from watching things that aren’t necessarily well-made. With editing, there are so many different ways to assemble a story that it’s sometimes more valuable to learn what you shouldn’t do. It’s also incredibly useful to learn as much as you can about motion graphics, audio mixing and color correction across several applications since I think most clients are looking for editors who can cross over into those areas of post.

Podcast 12.4

Shooting Doc About Rare Disability in Observational Style

Born with a disability so rare that no reliable statistics for it exist, filmmaker Ella Glendining wonders if there is anyone who can share the experience of living in a body like hers. This simple question leads to a journey not only to others who live like her, but to the realization that meeting them changes how she sees herself in the world. And it reveals many surprises along the way.

Filmmaker Ella Glendining

With intimate personal diaries, conversations with similarly bodied people and doctors treating Glendining’s condition, and a searching and unique perspective, Is There Anybody Out There? invites the viewer to consider questions and assumptions they may have never encountered before. Are people who are born this way supposed to be “fixed” by medicine? Is it ableist to see disabled people as living an undesired existence? With warmth and an infectious joy for her body and life as it is, Glendining challenges how viewers will see others like and unlike themselves.

The film was shot by DP Annemarie Lean-Vercoe, whose credits include Breeders, Murder in Provence and All Creatures Great and Small. We reached out to her for more…

How early did you get involved?
I met Ella four years ago. I heard there was a director who lived locally to me looking for a DP, and when I met her, I knew I wanted to be part of her journey.

How did you work with the Ella? What direction were you given?
We had a very organic way of working together. On our first shoot day, we filmed at her house and then went out for her first antenatal meeting with doctors. Filming started off in a very observational style and continued that way. I think Ella was happy with this observational doc style, and it also made the viewer feel that they were very much on her personal journey with her.

DP Annemarie Lean-Vercoe

DP Annemarie Lean-Vercoe

What about the color and working with the colorist? What are some notes that you exchanged?
We worked with a post house called Serious Facilities in Glasgow, and Ben Mullen was the colorist. He understood straight away that the film needed to be graded in a naturalistic way, with subtle manipulations to mids and highlights — such as adding a warmer or cooler tone to help enhance the narrative without the viewer noticing.

What did you end up shooting on and why?  
I switched between three different cameras for the duration of the shoot — the Canon C300, the Canon C500 and the Panasonic Lumix GH5. The film is an observational doc, with me mostly shooting and recording sound. I had to be lightweight, compact and quickly versatile, so I shot with two Sigma zoom lenses. The Sigma Art zooms are fast at F1.8. I mostly used the 18-35mm lens and occasionally used the 50-100mm lens.

Are there some scenes that stick out as challenging?
We had a large scene where we meet several new characters in the film for the first time, and I had a second camera person and sound person for that one — so from a technical point of view, our shooting unit expanded drastically for just one day. It had been such an intimate film for so long up to that point, so it was a change of gears for me.

Looking back on the film, would you have done anything different?
Not really. The film needed to unfold the way it did, and I am really pleased with how it turned out.

Any tips for young cinematographers?
Shoot as much as possible, and don’t be afraid to experiment. Find your voice. You never stop learning.

Podcast 12.4

Sundance: DP Derek Howard on Shooting Plan C Doc

The Sundance documentary Plan C, directed by Tracy Droz Tragos, follows Francine Coeytaux and the team who established Plan C — a grassroots organization dedicated to expanding access to medication abortion.

DP Derek Howard

Droz Tragos follows the group as they look for ways to distribute abortion pills while following the letter of the law. Unmarked vans serving as mobile clinics distribute medication to those who cannot get help in their own states.

The doc was shot by DP Derek Howard and edited by Meredith Perry (who will be talking to us about her role in the film in the near future). We reached out to Howard, who got involved in Plan C near the start of production. “I believe there had been just a few research shoots completed before we really got the camera package organized and started getting out there filming,” he says.

Let’s find out more…

How did you work with the Tracy Droz Tragos? What direction were you given?
This was the second project I worked on with Tracy, so we had a little bit of experience working in the field together. Tracy owned the camera package we were using — Canon C500 Mark II with Cooke Panchro primes — so she has a good understanding of the technical side of things. We would agree on a few focal lengths we were going to favor and omit medium shots for the most part. I would have a lot of freedom in terms of composition and lighting, and we would often check in with each other about swapping primes at appropriate breaks. After a few shoots it became pretty intuitive as to when it would make sense to change lenses and go closer or widen out.

Once we got into a good groove, we didn’t have to communicate about these choices so much, and it just started to flow as the style was established. We were lucky to have an incredible editing team (Meredith Perry and Beth Kearsley, who cut on Adobe Premiere). They were putting together sequences throughout shooting so I could review what was making the cut and focus in on the style more precisely.

What about working with the colorist? What are some notes that you exchanged? Who was the colorist?
We graded Plan C using Blackmagic DaVinci Resolve with Brian Hutchings in several remote sessions over Zoom and using Frame io. We would do a quick pass of the entire film, establishing looks at the beginning of each scene, and then skip ahead to the next one so he could work independently once we’d set some parameters.

DP Derek Howard

Then after some days, we’d have another pass, make more detailed adjustments and just build things from there. A lot of the notes were to do with highlight control, color temperature shifts and depth enhancements. We wanted our heroes to have a warm and inviting aura and to lean in to certain seasonal shifts. Often, we’d want to create a feeling of more depth by darkening certain foreground or background areas and helping to direct the viewer’s eye. We would often key specific colors and have them pop in saturation to emphasize certain details, like someone’s nail art or the color of their eyes.

As you said before, you shot on the Canon camera? 
Yes. We shot Plan C on the Canon C500 Mark II with Cooke Panchro/i Classic primes in Super 35mm crop sensor mode. This camera is an ideal choice because it is small and lightweight, can record continuously for long periods of time with minimal battery consumption, and has internal Rawlite. The Cooke Panchro primes are a fantastic pairing with this camera, as they are compact, fast and have a nice softening translation of the image that cuts the digital sharpness and has very pleasing flares and bokeh.

DP Derek Howard

Can you talk lighting?
I took advantage of available lighting as much as possible, positioning subjects close to windows or away from direct light sources. Overhead lighting fixtures would be turned off, and sometimes we would use practical lamps for a little lift in the ambient levels. On very few occasions, I would use some 750-watt tungsten lamps shot through diffusion to key an interview and sometimes some bounce or white cloth to lift faces.

Are there some scenes that stick out as challenging?
The biggest challenge while shooting Plan C was to find creative solutions for filming subjects who needed to remain anonymous. We would return to some of the subjects several times throughout the film, and they needed to have their identities protected, so I had to explore how to film an interview with them and capture their presence and vibe without showing any full faces.

We used long lenses, like a 75mm or 100mm, to film abstract details such as hands, feet, the edge of a face or a silhouette by a window. Over the course of a long interview, it gets difficult to find new angles and compositions, so searching for fresh ways to convey a subject’s presence without actually seeing them clearly was a big obstacle. We were able to overcome that mostly through experimentation and abstraction made possible in large part thanks to the prime lenses we were lucky to have available to us.

DP Derek Howard

Looking back on the film, would you have done anything different?
Of course. With every project, when you watch it, you can’t help but critique your own work and think about different things you would have done. So much time passes from production to premiere that by the time you are watching the final film, you always feel like you have evolved in your style or learned things that you would have applied to the shoot.

With Plan C, I would have liked to have a few portable, battery-powered fixtures, like an Astera tube or an MC Lite to quickly add little accents to a scene. Having compact, battery-powered lights than can produce any color you might need are super-handy and flexible if you need to adjust a scene super-quickly. Often in verité situations, there is no time for lighting, but having these types of fixtures allows for very fast enhancements that can help elevate a scene a lot.

Any tips for young cinematographers?
Pay attention to the content of a scene as closely as possible. Once you are feeling the moment and are as present as possible, you will intuitively operate the camera differently than if you are just focusing on all the technical factors. React to the emotions in each scene; allow your humanness to be a part of your handling.

Be as prepared and researched as possible before shooting, but during filming, turn that part of your brain off and work from the gut. All the prep is still inside you, but I find the best moments come when you put that in the background and let your intuition take the lead. Remember to look away from your monitor or eyepiece from time to time and look around the scene for other details or things that are happening out of frame that might be valuable to incorporate.

 

Shirampari

Sundance: DP Diego Pérez Romero on Shirampari Amazon Doc

DP Diego Pérez Romero is a documentary filmmaker and environmentalist from Peru. He has over 10 years of experience working with organizations dedicated to the conservation of the Amazon rainforest and its cultures. Thanks to his work as a videographer, photographer and filmmaker, he has helped to shine a light on the natural and cultural wealth of Peru.

Shirampari

DP Diego Pérez Romero

Shirampari: Legacies of the River was part of the official selection at Sundance 2023 in the Documentary Short Film Program. Written and directed by Lucia Flórez, the film takes place in one of the most remote areas in the Peruvian Amazon, where an Ashéninka boy must overcome his fears and catch a giant catfish using only a hook to begin his adult journey.

We reached out to Pérez Romero to talk about his process…

How early did you get involved on this film?
Very early. I actually started the project with director Lucia Flórez. In 2020, Nat Geo announced a grant for stories in tropical forests around the world. Also in those weeks, Lucia returned to Peru after finishing her master’s degree in documentary film, so I proposed that she apply for the grant with something related to the Yurúa District and the hook fishing thing I knew they were doing over there. Happily, she accepted. We did a lot of research and shaped it into a short documentary. In February 2021 we found out that we won the grant, and the rest is history.

Lucia Flórez

How did you work with Lucia? What direction were you given?
We discussed the style early on. She wanted to make it verité and indie. That was the outline for the style. We shared different documentaries and films we liked, talked about them. Then I worked on a plan for how we were going to achieve a cohesive look and how the cinematography was going to favor the narrative and the story we wanted to tell.

Before shooting, the main direction Lucia gave me was to make sentences with the camera instead of words. On the field, before any scene was shot, we would have a little talk about what was important to highlight, then during the shots, we would look at each other, she would make small signs or gestures to me to adjust and go from point A to point B, or go closer, move around, stuff like that.

ShirampariWhat about working with the colorist? What was the goal of the color?
The colorist was César Pérez, and in post, we all agreed that we wanted a natural look — no teal and orange Hollywood kind of thing, leaving shadows to be shadows. Basically, it was more of a color correction to match both cameras, give it a little punch but not too much, and that was it.

What did you end up shooting on and why?  
Canon C70 and Canon EF lenses, 16 to 35 f4IS, 24-70 2.8 ii and 100-400 L (which were already mine from my work as a photographer). Also, Canon R6 for one underwater scene, when we knew we were going to shoot with two cameras for coverage — this is when Ricky catches the fish.

Shirampari

DP Diego Pérez Romero shooting with the Canon cine camera

Why these cameras? The budget wasn’t huge, there was no option for renting cine lenses, and also weather sealed-equipment was a must shooting 15 days in the Amazon, mostly outside and having no backup lenses.

I had seen the release of the C70 a few months before the shoot and did some research. The form factor was interesting, and the dual-gain output sensor was like the C300 but half the price; it was a no-brainer.

This was also my first time working with a cine camera, and there was a learning curve for sure.

Can you talk about the lighting?
We used mostly natural light. About 95% of the shots were lit by the sun, with no modifiers. We trusted the sensor capability to handle the dynamic range and framing to have a nice, balanced image. There are two shots where we used a reflector to push sunlight in and one where we used a very small LED panel with a CTB gel on a night scene, but that was it.

There wasn’t much space to modify the light, as we didn’t want to be a distraction to the protagonists. When you start building things, you get in the way.

Are there some scenes that stick out as challenging? Can you talk about those?
Before shooting started, I thought the main challenge I was going to find was that being so close to the characters (at 24mm) could have intimidated them to the point that it would affect their performance. In the end, this did not happen.

The hardest scene was the follow shot, when Arlindo carries the catfish to the community, because it was a challenge for them and me. In addition to the accumulated fatigue of several days of physical shooting — and in somewhat extreme conditions due to the heat, the mosquitoes, the absence of toilets, etc. — they carried a fish weighing almost 100 kilos, and I carried the camera. While the camera doesn’t weigh even a third of that, it was still super-difficult to maintain the frame and focus while climbing that cliff without having a crazy-shaky shot. We all ended up exhausted.

One thing to mention here is that there were no repetitions. Everything was shot once and that was it.

Looking back on the film, would you have done anything different?
I would have gotten a different cage for the camera.

Any tips for young cinematographers?
I am no expert here. This was my first gig as DP on a cine project. But for me, if there is something I can share from my little experience, it’s this: Passion is key, being obsessed, dreaming about what you will do, getting scared of failing, having nightmares, but not letting this turn you down.

Also you need to be genuinely interested in your characters. If you will be following somebody with a huge camera all day long, there has to be some fire inside of you.

Sundance: DP Martina Radwan on Documentary Food and Country

DP Martina Radwan is a German-born, New York City-based director of photography who specializes in documentaries. Her extensive credit list includes the docs Inventing Tomorrow, The Final Year, The Promised BandThrough a Lens Darkly and Saving Face. Her narrative works ranges from the Bahamian feature Rain to the thriller Under Construction to the horror film Train.

Martina Radwan

Recently she shot the Laura Gabbert-directed, Ruth Reichlproduced Food and Country, which premiered at Sundance. The film shines a light on America’s broken food system and features interviews with farmers, ranchers and chefs.

She joined the production in 2021, taking over from the original DP, Jerry Henry, when he had a scheduling conflict. We reached out to Radwan to find out more about her work on this film.

How did you work with Laura Gabbert? What direction were you given?
Laura and I discussed each shot extensively before and during the shoot. During the shoot I had more autonomy since we shot a lot verité.

Martina Radwan

Martina Radwan on-location

What did you end up shooting on and why?  
We used the Canon C300 Mark II and the Canon C500 Mark II with Canon Cine Prime and Canon EF lenses, particularly Canon EF 17-55. I own the package, but I also felt that Canon was the right choice for this project — I really like how Canon renders contrast and color, and the camera’s latitude helped when shooting the exteriors.

What about the lighting?
We agreed to use available lighting only, except for interviews.

Are there some scenes that stick out as challenging? Can you talk about those?
We had several challenges. Due to the pandemic and the topic, we had to shoot outside a lot. With that, we had very little control, and the schedule didn’t allow us to shoot only at the beginning and end of day. We tried to schedule our midday shoots in a way that would avoid shooting in direct sunlight.

While shooting on-location, they only used natural light.

Large, commercial kitchens were also challenging. Kitchens are rarely visually pleasant since they are dominated by flat overhead light and tons of plastic tubs and containers. The challenge is to make it look clean and appealing. You want the audience to get hungry while watching these wonderful meals being prepared.

Looking back on the film, would you have done anything different?
Honestly, I am not sure. I am happy with how things worked out.

Any tips for young cinematographers?
Don’t be afraid to experiment. It’s hard to do that on the job, but if it works for the story, most directors will embrace it.

Moonage Daydream

Color Grading the David Bowie Doc Moonage Daydream

Filmmaker Brett Morgen threw out the rulebook when creating the David Bowie documentary Moonage Daydream. The film, which opened globally in IMAX and theatrically earlier this year, is an abstract take on the iconic artist, mixing all manner of imagery — from the expected concert footage and interviews to tiny snippets from classic films, animations and moments from seemingly unrelated documentary and industrial films. Morgen (Cobain: Montage of Heck, Jane) cut it all together into a collage designed to affect the viewer much more on an emotional level than more traditional documentaries do — far more montage than reportage.

Moonage DaydreamOnce Morgen completed the cut, he took the project to Company 3’s Santa Monica location, where he and senior colorist Tyler Roth (Oscar-nominated documentary Minding the Gap) collaborated to create a grade that complements the director’s approach to the editing. “The color,” says Morgen, “was more lyrical and poetic than any film I have worked on.  We ‘painted’ every inch of each frame, and rarely were we trying to match the natural cadence.”

“It was a lot of pushing things to extremes or ‘relighting’ and adding colors that weren’t in the original shots,” Roth notes. As Morgen espoused his vision for the film, Roth realized that the project would require taking imagery much further away from its original form than he had before. Where any colorist might be concerned about pushing colors and contrast too far — and possibly “breaking” the image — those simply wouldn’t be seen as problems by this director. The primary concern would always be to make sure that each shot contributes to the overall experience of watching this film.

Moonage Daydreams

Tyler Roth

“The approach to the grade for Moonage was unlike anything I had experienced or even heard of on other heavily stylized or technically unique projects,” Roth adds. “Typically, on a film, narrative or documentary, I would set looks with the DP and/or director on representative shots and then go through and match up the rest before reviewing and revising in context. It’s sort of a layered process, sculpting and refining the looks down to the details. Rather, Brett and I would work shot by shot in a very macro, granular way, with a vision in mind for the sequence as a whole. Then we would zoom out to review the flow and feel and then refine from there.”

The film, he adds, “shows David being interviewed and David performing, but it’s sometimes intercut with 30 or 40 total non sequitur shots that have some kind of a visual cue that relates them to one another and to the shots of David.” The opening imagery of the film combines shots from the 1927 silent film Metropolis, the 1902 French short A Trip to the Moon, footage from NASA and various animations to establish an otherworldly feel of an alien arriving to Earth, setting up Bowie’s arrival.

When the movie introduces archival shots of Bowie onstage, those shots barely reflect how they looked originally. They are full of colors that weren’t represented in the source material. They give a kind of emotional consistency within the scene while being totally untethered to each shot’s original look. Instead, the colors are designed to work emotionally. “Brett, who used hundreds of sources shot over a period of five decades, wanted everything to feel as if it’s brand-new,” Roth says.

We get an iconic glimpse of Bowie onstage, seemingly lit by a rainbow of light. This shot alone involved a significant number of hand-drawn masks tracked through the images in order to roto the artist out of the scene, “relight” the environment with spotlights and a rainbow made up of different colored beams of light created in Resolve, and then desaturate the performer. The result is a far cry from the original, old, somewhat faded image of the singer against a gray, blocky set.

In another shot of Bowie in a DJ booth, he and the booth itself were the result of extensive restoration followed by creative stylization laid on top of a faded, milky image. There are little squares and triangles and different-colored knobs on the console, some of which Roth painted a different color while also adding lighting effects. “It didn’t look like that at all when we started working on it,” says Roth. “We made it look the way it does to help make the image part of the flow of the film.”

The entire film was subject to this kind of reworking in the grade to create a film as enigmatic and provocative as its subject.

In addition to the “painting” and “relighting,” the color grading process also required an enormous amount of work that falls under the category of restoration. Images from a wide variety of old tape formats and film gauges, often in a degraded state, had to work for this documentary, which was designed to be experienced on giant IMAX screens.

Roth used a combination of tools within Blackmagic’s DaVinci Resolve to accomplish this facet of the work on the imagery, which came from myriad formats of old videotape and a wide range of film scans. “I used temporal noise reduction, spatial noise reduction – specifically chroma noise reduction – in many cases, affecting specific portions of the frame or certain color channels, defocusing some parts of the image and sharpening others.”

The complex process of grading Moonage Daydream took longer than on any other film he’s done. In all, he reports, it involved hundreds of hours in the theater over the course of a year because so much creative energy was involved in grading each individual shot.

As Roth acclimated to Morgen’s highly unorthodox thinking about color grading images, he soon found the process to be among his most artistically rewarding. “It changed the way I think about what you can and can’t do in color grading,” he notes.

“Brett has said in multiple interviews, and we’ve talked about it too that the movie is about David Bowie, but it’s not necessarily just about David. It embodies David.”

Of the sessions with Roth, Morgen observes, it was like creating “abstract painting. We were writing the film in the color theater. The film was birthed there.”

 

Bringing the documentary Long Live Benjamin to life

By Dayna McCallum

The New York Times Op-Docs recently debuted Long Live Benjamin, a six-part episodic documentary directed by Jimm Lasser (Wieden & Kennedy) and Biff Butler (Rock Paper Scissors), and produced by Rock Paper Scissors Entertainment.

The film focuses on acclaimed portrait artist Allen Hirsch, who, while visiting his wife’s homeland of Venezuela, unexpectedly falls in love. The object of his affection — a deathly ill, orphaned newborn Capuchin monkey named Benjamin. After nursing Benjamin back to health and sneaking him into New York City, Hirsch finds his life, and his sense of self, forever changed by his adopted simian son.

We reached out to Lasser and Butler to learn more about this compelling project, the challenges they faced, and the unique story of how Long Live Benjamin came to life.

Long Live Benjamin

Benjamin sculpture, Long Live Benjamin

How did this project get started?
Lasser: I was living in Portland at the time. While in New York I went to visit Allen, who is my first cousin. I knew Benjamin when he was alive, and came by to pay my respects. When I entered Allen’s studio space, I saw his sculpture of Benjamin and the frozen corpse that was serving as his muse. Seeing this scene, I felt incredibly compelled to document what my cousin was going through. I had never made a film or thought of doing so, but I found myself renting a camera and staying the weekend to begin filming and asking Allen to share his story.

Butler: Jimm had shown up for a commercial edit bearing a bag of Mini DV tapes. We offered to transfer his material to a hard drive, and I guess the initial copy was never deleted from my own drive. Upon initial preview of the material, I have to say it all felt quirky and odd enough to be humorous; but when I took the liberty of watching the material at length, I witnessed an artist wrestling with his grief. I found this profound switch in takeaway so compelling that I wanted to see where a project like this might lead.

Can you describe your collaboration on the film?
Lasser: It began as a director/editor relationship, but it evolved. Because of my access to the Hirsch family, I shot the footage and lead the questioning with Allen. Biff began organizing and editing the footage. But as we began to develop the tone and feel of the storytelling, it became clear that he was as much a “director” of the story as I was.

Butler: In terms of advertising, Jimm is one of the smartest and discerning creatives I’ve had the pleasure of working with. I found myself having rather differing opinions to him, but I always learned something new and felt we came to stronger creative decisions because of such conflict. When the story of Allen and his monkey began unfolding in front of me, I was just as keen to foster this creative relationship as I was to build a movie.

Did the film change your working relationship?
Butler: As a commercial editor, it’s my job to carry a creative team’s hard work to the end of their laborious process — they conceive the idea, sell it through, get it made and trust me to glue the pieces together. I am of service to this, and it’s a privilege. When the footage I’d found on my hard drive started to take shape, and Jimm’s cousin began unloading his archive of paintings, photographs and home video on to us, it became a more involved endeavor. Years passed, as we’d get busy and leave things to gather dust for months here and there, and after a while it felt like this film was something that reflected both of our creative fingerprints.

Long Live Benjamin

Jimm Lasser, Long Live Benjamin

How did your professional experiences help or influence the project?
Lasser: Collaboration is central to the process of creating advertising. Being open to others is central to making great advertising. This process was a lot like film school. We both hadn’t ever done it, but we figured it out and found a way to work together.

Butler: Jimm and I enjoyed individual professional success during the years we spent on the project, and in hindsight I think this helped to reinforce the trust that was necessary in such a partnership.

What was the biggest technical challenge you faced?
Butler: The biggest challenge was just trying to get our schedules to line up. For a number of years we lived on opposite sides of the country, although there were three years where we both happened to live in New York at the same time. We found that the luxury of sitting was when the biggest creative strides happened. Most of the time, though, I would work on an edit, send to Jimm, and wait for him to give feedback. Then I’d be busy on something else when he’d send long detailed notes (and often new interviews to supplement the notes), and I would need to wait a while until I had the time to dig back in.

Technically speaking, the biggest issue might just be my use of Final Cut Pro 7. The film is made as a scrapbook from multiple sources, and quite simply Final Cut Pro doesn’t care much for this! Because we never really “set out” to “make a movie,” I had let the project grow somewhat unwieldy before realizing it needed to be organized as such.

Long Live Benjamin

Biff Butler, Long Live Benjamin

Can you detail your editorial workflow? What challenges did the varying media sources pose?
Butler: As I noted before, we didn’t set out to make a movie. I had about 10 tapes from Jimm and cut a short video just because I figured it’s not every day you get to edit someone’s monkey funeral. Cat videos this ain’t. Once Allen saw this, he would sporadically mail us photographs, newspaper clippings, VHS home videos, iPhone clips, anything and everything. Jimm and I were really just patching on to our initial short piece, until one day we realized we should start from scratch and make a movie.

As my preferred editing software is Final Cut Pro 7 (I’m old school, I guess), we stuck with it and just had to make sure the media was managed in a way that had all sources compressed to a common setting. It wasn’t really an issue, but needed some unraveling once we went to online conform. Due to our schedules, the process occurred in spurts. We’d make strides for a couple weeks, then leave it be for a month or so at a time. There was never a time where the project wasn’t in my backpack, however, and it proved to be my companion for over five years. If there was a day off, I would keep my blades sharp by cracking open the monkey movie and chipping away.

You shot the project as a continuous feature, and it is being shown now in episodic form. How does it feel to watch it as an episodic series?
Lasser: It works both ways, which I am very proud of. The longer form piece really lets you sink into Allen’s world. By the end of it, you feel Allen’s POV more deeply. I think not interrupting Alison Ables’ music allows the narrative to have a greater emotional connective tissue. I would bet there are more tears at the end of the longer format.

The episode form sharpened the narrative and made Allen’s story more digestible. I think that form makes it more open to a greater audience. Coming from advertising, I am used to respecting people’s attention spans, and telling stories in accessible forms.

How would you compare the documentary process to your commercial work? What surprised you?
Lasser: The executions of both are “storytelling,” but advertising has another layer of “marketing problem solving” that effects creative decisions. I was surprised how much Allen became a “client” in the process, since he was opening himself up so much. I had to keep his trust and assure him I was giving his story the dignity it deserved. It would have been easy to make his story into a joke.

Artist Allen Hirsch

Butler: It was my intention to never meet Allen until the movie was done, because I cherished that distance I had from him. In comparison to making a commercial, the key word here would be “truth.” The film is not selling anything. It’s not an advertisement for Allen, or monkeys, or art or New York. We certainly allowed our style to be influenced by Allen’s way of speaking, to sink deep into his mindset and point of view. Admittedly, I am very often bored by documentary features; there tends to be a good 20 minutes that is only there so it can be called “feature length” but totally disregards the attention span of the audience. On the flip side, there is an enjoyable challenge in commercial making where you are tasked to take the audience on a journey in only 60 seconds, and sometimes 30 or 15. I was surprised by how much I enjoyed being in control of what our audience felt and how they felt it.

What do you hope people will take away from the film?
Lasser: To me this is a portrait of an artist. His relationship with Benjamin is really an ingredient to his own artistic process. Too often we focus on the end product of an artist, but I was fascinated in the headspace that leads a creative person to create.

Butler: What I found most relatable in Allen’s journey was how much life seemed to happen “to” him. He did not set out to be the eccentric man with a monkey on his shoulders; it was through a deep connection with an animal that he found comfort and purpose. I hope people sympathize with Allen in this way.


To watch Long Live Benjamin, click here.

Lucy and Desi

Emmy Chat: Lucy and Desi Doc Editor Robert A. Martinez

Editor Robert A. Martinez received his second Emmy nomination this year for the Amy Poehler-directed documentary Lucy and Desi. This freelance editor is no stranger to awards, receiving an Emmy nod for director Frank Marshall’s 2021 doc The Bee Gees: How Can You Mend a Broken Heart. Other work includes the Mole Man and Pavarotti documentaries.

Lucy and Desi

Robert A. Martinez

Martinez worked on Lucy and Desi nearly a full year, starting in mid-January 2021 and finishing toward the end of December. We reached out to him with a few questions about how he worked on the doc, which he edited on Avid Media Composer.

What was your process on this one?
One of our guiding principles for the film was to go beyond the two-dimensional images that are so often imposed on Lucy and Desi. Calling them “legends” or “geniuses” can create a distance between them and the audience, so we always wanted to approach them at a human level — as a son, daughter, husband, wife and friend. They were so progressive, and their solutions to overcoming obstacles always came from a human place.

As far as the workflow for the edit, the first major push was to get to the rough cut — or at least to a large enough chunk of the film to get feedback on. That gives everyone a sense of what is or isn’t working as well as the general shape of the film.

After that, we started scheduled editing sessions in LA, which we were lucky enough to have in person. We would have weekly or biweekly cycles when Amy, writer/producer Mark Monroe and I would meet to talk through scenes and review new edits. After the session I would have a list of scenes and notes to work on, and we’d meet up again in a week or so to share progress. This balance of time in the edit bay and time for me to work alone at home was crucial and speaks highly of their skills as collaborators. You need to have that trust to make real progress.

In addition to newly shot interviews, you were working with older film. What were the challenges involved in that? Did anything need restoration?
There was a lot of the standard restoration that occurs when you create an archival-based documentary (photo restoration, sound mixing old audio tapes). But because of the innovative filming techniques Desi created on I Love Lucy, all the footage from the show has been beautifully preserved on film. That was such a gift for us.

Lucy and DesiWhat direction/feedback did you get from Amy Poehler?
Amy is a special person and storyteller. She has so many qualities that make her a great documentary director. For one, she is genuinely curious about people and what makes them tick. During our sessions we had a ton of conversations unrelated to the edit… just about Lucy and Desi as people and what they might do in hypothetical situations.

She is also an incredibly agile storyteller. In the making of a documentary, you do as much as you can in pre-production through research and drafting a story outline but once the edit begins you are constantly discovering new story beats, archival and characters that can alter the trajectory of the film.

Amy was very decisive on which of these new discoveries to explore and which we should abandon. That is such a huge help for an editor because without that vision, you often end up with wasted time cutting scenes that eventually get removed because they don’t connect to the overall story.

I feel very privileged to have had the opportunity to work with her, and hopefully she directs more docs in the future.

Can you give us an example of something that was particularly challenging or that you are most proud of?
I’m most proud of the emotional connection viewers have had to the film. When building scenes, I start by zeroing in on the emotion we want to tap into and the reasons behind the events that occur. Hearing that people were in tears by the end of the film is very gratifying.

What haven’t we asked that you feel is important about your role on this show?
Nothing else for me, but I would like to take a moment to thank my post team: Inaya Yusuf (additional editor/assistant editor), Dan Reed (additional editor) and Mike Smith (post assistant). Thank you for all your talent and friendship!

Robin Blotnick on Editing the AOC Climate Doc To The End

Editor Robin Blotnick

Filmmaker Robin Blotnick was editor on To The End, a documentary film that is a sort of a sequel to Knock Down the House. It follows Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez alongside three young leaders — Varshini Prakash of the Sunrise Movement, Alexandra Rojas of Justice Democrats and policy writer Rhiana Gunn-Wright — as they fight for a big, bold and scientifically realistic government response to the climate crisis.

“It starts in 2019, when the Green New Deal was ascendant, and takes us through the turbulence of the 2020 elections and the pandemic all the way to the anxiety and uncertainty of the present moment,” explains Blotnick. “On the way we witness firsthand the way meaningful change has been stymied by a powerful fossil fuel industry, politicians on both sides of the aisle and, to some extent, the news media itself.”

Blotnick’s wife and longtime collaborator, Rachel Lears, was both director and DP on this film, which was shot, for the most part, on a Sony FX6 with a Sony FE 70-200mm lens. “Washington, DC-based Ray Whitehouse was an invaluable second unit DP on this. He knew the capital in and out from his work as a photojournalist. We also worked with 10 other great cinematographers based all around the country to cover scenes that Rachel couldn’t be at in person, especially when the pandemic made travel difficult.”

Color and audio post was done at NYC’s Final Frame, which Blotnick says did the pair’s two previous films. Let’s find out more from To The End’s editor, who cut on Adobe Premiere.

Director Rachel Lears

How did you work with Rachel? What direction were you given for the edit? How often was she looking at your cut?
Rachel’s always very involved in the edit, and since I live with her, and we work from home, it was easy to share my work for frequent feedback.

She and producer Sabrina Schmidt Gordon (who’s also an editor) had strong editorial visions and crucial roles in shaping the edit. But they were also very busy with production, which continued until three weeks before our premiere, so I had opportunities to build scenes and sequences on my own as well.

Can you talk about working on this during the pandemic? How did that affect the workflow?
Rachel and I were already working out of a home office, so editing workflow didn’t change dramatically when the pandemic set in. One good thing to come out of it for me was that production slowed down for a while, which gave me time to catch up on watching and logging all the footage we’d already shot.

On the downside we had to do post during NYC’s Omicron surge, and our colorist came down with COVID just days before we were scheduled to start. The post house was short-staffed and scrambling during the Sundance rush, but they pulled everything off very gracefully, and we were able to get enough days of color and sound in-person. I’m not sure what we would have done if we’d had to do post remotely. How would that even work?

Alexandra Rojas of Justice Democrats

What was a particular challenge to this project?
I suspect I’m not alone in saying the pandemic presented the biggest challenge for us. For a while, we were afraid the entire second half of the film might have to be a bunch of Zoom interviews. The solution we arrived at was to create scenes of our protagonists at home and isolated, taking in the world through their TVs and computers — the way so many of us did in those early months of 2020.

For example, when Varshini Prakash and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez were tapped to be on Joe Biden’s climate task force, it was an important moment in our story, but even if we could have secured access, it would have been nothing but Zoom meetings. To make things harder, the mainstream media wasn’t covering the story at all. Luckily, Fox News was, so we ended up using their alarmist coverage about how AOC was steering Joe Biden to the left to give the moment the weight and sense of drama that it needed. It ended up creating some interesting irony because you see that Fox News and our subjects are effectively saying the same thing.

Did you do more than edit on this film?
I’m also a producer and writer on the film, which meant I frequently talked through storytelling choices with Rachel and Sabrina and spent a lot of time plotting out possible story arcs before they happened. To the extent that we had a post supervisor, that was me as well. I also worked as my own AE for the most part.

Transcriptive at use within Premiere

You cut on Adobe Premiere. Is there a particular tool within that system that came in handy for this one?
We originally envisioned this project as a series, so anticipating a team of editors, our EPs at Story Syndicate helped me set up Project Shortcuts, which was a new tool at the time. This turned out to be very useful because we could keep our project files on a shared folder in Google Drive. This meant that I could be editing a scene, Rachel could be making a radio edit from an interview, and Sabrina could be watching raw footage, all at the same time without saving over each other’s work.

I also relied heavily on the third-party plugin Transcriptive, which allows you to align transcriptions to the footage. For instance, you can do a keyword search of an interview and jump to the exact frame of the footage where the word is spoken.

How did you manage your time?
Rachel and I have a 5-year-old son. When you’re working as a self-employed artist with a young child, you learn to make the best possible use of every free hour you have.

One thing that always helps me is planning out the film with scene cards – first as physical index cards and later in the program Trello. It’s gotten to the point where I can look at a sequence of cards and play it out in my head before I even edit the scenes. This way I don’t have to spend as much time following wrong paths. That said, following wrong paths and wasting time is unavoidable and an important part of the creative process.

Robin Blotknick’s WFH setup

Do you manage expectations or try everything they ask of you?
I always try everything the others on the team ask. Sometimes I’m sure something won’t work and am pleasantly surprised. That’s why it’s good to make room for another set of eyes, especially when you feel blocked and out of ideas.

How do you take criticism?
I think I get better at taking criticism with each new project. When I first started as an editor, I was rigidly protective of my creations and afraid of the work involved with taking things apart and trying it another way.

With this project I often found myself happily willing to try sweeping, drastic changes at the drop of a hat. I guess I’ve come to learn how fluid a film is, how much it needs to be revolutionized again and again, and how crucial other people’s perspectives are. There’s no way I could do this in a bubble. That said, I still get defensive sometimes, especially when getting criticism at the end of a long day. It’s easier to take in other people’s ideas when you’re rested and ready to address them.

Finally, any tips for those just starting out?
This is kind of a small and obvious thing, but I would say take the time to get to know the platform you’re using inside out from the very beginning. I first started nonlinear editing with Final Cut Pro way back in 1999, and I was self-taught and didn’t know all the keyboard commands — I basically did everything using my mouse. When I switched to Premiere, I took the time to do online tutorials and learn it properly and realized all that I’d been missing.

Main Image: Varshini Prakash of the Sunrise Movement

The Janes

Sounds of the ‘60s: Creating Empowering Score for The Janes Doc

Max Avery Lichtenstein is a composer who has written scores and songs for narrative features (James Marsh’s The King, Todd Haynes’ Far From Heaven) and documentaries (Mondays at Racine, Very Semi-Serious: A Partially Thorough Portrait of New Yorker Cartoonists, Tarnation) recently worked on The Janes.

The Janes

Max Avery Lichtenstein

This documentary, which screened at Sundance, is about a group of women who ran a clandestine abortion service in late-1960s Chicago — before Roe vs. Wade made the procedure legal throughout the US. These women risked the wrath of the mafia, the church and (most of all) the state to provide safe, affordable and compassionate services to those most in need. The film’s use of archival footage coupled with honest interviews with the Janes themselves conveys the spirit of revolution in that historic moment.

“The film’s editor Kristen Huntley was just starting to weave together archival footage using my scores from the films Harley and Weed & Wine as temp,” explains Lichtenstein. “The directors Emma Pildes and Tia Lessin really liked the energy and atmosphere that my music was bringing to these vintage scenes, so they reached out to see if I could write some custom “caper”-style themes that they could confidently use to build the cut around.

“I usually score directly to picture, but this early involvement before a first cut had been assembled gave me the freedom to focus on establishing a distinct vibe and energy for the score. I also think it allowed Kristen, Tia, and Emma to quickly nail down the overall spirit and tone of the film, which helped them as they focused on the edit.”

The Janes

Emma Pildes

Let’s find out more from Lichtenstein…

What direction were you given in terms of the score?
Emma and Tia loved the idea of approaching the score like it was a classic ‘60s heist film — the goal was to highlight the clandestine, risky and rebellious nature of the Janes’ work. There are also a surprising number of funny moments in the film, so they wanted the music to accent these as well. At the same time, the film explores a serious and emotionally fraught subject, so it was important that the score would also respectfully support (and leave space for) the women’s deeply personal stories.

Can you describe the score? What were your influences?
Much of the score is distinctly retro sounding, with a smokey mid-century jazz vibe. There are also cues that lean more into ‘60s rock and soul but are still structured to work as an underscore.

Producing The Janes score was a lot of fun because I was able to really embrace the arrangement style of classic caper scores from the ‘60s. I was inspired by the work of Roy Budd on Get Carter, Lalo Schifrin’s work on Bullitt and Mission Impossible, and Quincy Jones’ score for The Italian Job. Henry Mancini and Bernard Herrmann are obvious influences as well.

Tia Lession

What instruments does it include?
Many of the cues feature prominent bass lines, which is a noticeable component of ‘60s scores. I used upright bass and electric bass and would sometimes include both in a cue to create a unique sound that sits somewhere in between jazz and rock. Drums and percussion also play a key role in the score. The rhythmic elements really help to maintain the film’s forward momentum, even when the cues are tucked under dialogue.

There are other homages to the classic sounds of the ‘60s and ‘70s, including woodwinds, pizzicato strings, Hammond organ, and twangy electric guitar. For the more intimate and emotional moments, I pared things back and relied on a small ensemble of piano, cello and double bass.

Can you talk about your process? What instrument do you start out on?
For The Janes, I generally started each cue by working on the rhythm. Frequently, it would be a brushed drum kit pattern or a repeating bass line that would set the pace. From there I would build up the arrangement with electric guitar, organ and woodwinds. In the early phase of scoring (before I was working to picture), I produced tracks that would build over the course of a few minutes so Kristen could choose excerpts that had the feel or intensity she needed while cutting.

Once the picture was in the fine-cut stage, I went back into each scene where Kristen had used my themes and rebuilt the arrangement to work perfectly against picture. I also developed and expanded upon the thematic material I wrote early to score the scenes that didn’t have temp. Overall, it was a very organic process of evolution that seemed to serve the storytelling well.

The Janes

Max Avery Lichtenstein

What feedback did you get from the director Tia Lessin? Can you give an example?
Feedback is always helpful; a good back-and-forth really gets the cues doing what they need to. I tend to record my ideas as quickly as possible so I can send them to editorial in a rough-mixed QuickTime for review. That way we can all get an early sense for what works, what needs revision and what needs a totally different approach.

There was one scene in The Janes that particularly benefited from this process. It’s a long segment about the rising women’s movement. My original approach was to highlight the strong-willed attitude of the women protesting in the archive footage, so I gave the music a kind of “let’s get to work” energy. While the seriousness and importance of the movement was reflected in my original cue, Tia, Emma and Kristen quickly realized that we also needed to represent the joy that this rising social movement was instilling in its participants. Tia suggested drawing inspiration from “Brand New Day” as done by The Staple Singers, which really captured that joyfulness. I did another pass from that perspective and hit things right on the mark.

Was there something particularly challenging about this project? If so, what?
The challenge with any documentary is avoiding overt emotional manipulation with the music. In a film about abortion, this becomes essential. The intimate stories that the women share about their personal experiences with illegal abortion needed to speak for themselves, so all of those moments in the film are free of music. Instead, we used the score to recreate the revolutionary atmosphere of the time and to highlight the rebellious cat-and-mouse game these women were playing with the authorities. This allowed the film’s most powerful moments to resonate even deeper.