Tag Archives: Editor

May December Editor Affonso Gonçalves Talks Workflow

By Iain Blair

Writer/director Todd Haynes, who was Oscar-nominated for his ‘50s romantic drama Far from Heaven, has always been drawn to classic melodrama and period pieces that examine provocative issues. His new film, May December, tells the story of a shocking affair between 36-year-old Gracie (Julianne Moore) and 13-year-old Joe (Charles Melton). But it’s the fallout from the salacious tabloid-ready romance that Haynes is most interested in. Some 20 years later, Gracie and Joe now lead a seemingly picture-perfect suburban life. But their domestic bliss is disrupted when a famous actress (Natalie Portman) arrives to research her upcoming film role as Gracie.

The film was edited by Affonso Gonçalves, Haynes’ go-to editor who also cut Carol, Wonderstruck and The Velvet Underground. I spoke with Gonçalves, whose credits include True Detective, Winter’s Bone and Beasts of the Southern Wild, about the project’s challenges and workflow.

You’ve cut six of Todd’s projects, starting with Mildred Pierce. But this was a very different type of project, so how did you collaborate on May December?
Usually what happens with Todd, and it happened with this film, is that as soon as he has a script, he sends it my way. If I step back a little bit, what happened was that when we were cutting the Velvet Underground documentary, he was preparing to do this film about Peggy Lee. That eventually didn’t happen, and then this script came up.

He was talking with Natalie Portman about other projects, but she had this one she offered to him, and he really liked it. He sent the script to me, I read it, and I thought it was great. And it came about pretty fast. He sent it to Julianne Moore, they found Charles Melton and that was that.

Then Todd did what he always does, which is work on this kind of image book. And that’s visually how he communicates with the DP, with the production designer, and he sends that to the main people involved. So I got that, and he was also talking about the films that Natalie was watching and stuff for this, and definitely the music from The Go-Be­tween that ended up being a really big part of the creative process.

What kind of discussions did you have before you started work on this? Or did you just get the material and start cutting?

That’s basically what happens, because with Todd it’s not really a discussion about how it’s going to happen. We just talk about the film itself, and how it’s going to work. And Todd has a very specific way of working, which is he never, ever watches dailies. He only watches dailies if there’s a technical problem, or if there’s a performance issue or something like that.

As he doesn’t like to do dailies, I’m cutting everything at the same time and my assistant does DVDs of all the footage. By the time he’s finished shooting, he takes a little break, comes back and he watches all the footage by himself. He takes notes, then he sends the notes to me, and then I kind of do a little bit. I already, by the time he’s finished shooting, have a version of the film that I cut while he was shooting. But then he asks me to do a version based on his notes. And then from that point on, we start working together.

So you are not on the set at all?
Correct. For this one he was shooting in Savannah, and then we met up in Portland, Oregon, where he lives. Then we cut the film for the most part in Portland.

So what were the main challenges of cutting the film?
There were two main challenges, and I think I would say they’re fun challenges. One is the tone, and how to keep the right tone because it’s a story that unravels as it moves, and there are so many layers to it. And you have to start questioning yourself. You have your ideas of what these people are and what’s happening to them. And then slowly the more you know, you question your concepts of relationships, your moral integrity and their moral integrity. It’s really interesting. Plus, there’s humor. So how to keep [the right tone] for something that is almost like a thriller and also a melodrama, but it’s also a dark comedy. Keeping those tones moving in and out, and weaving them to make sense, that was a challenge.

The other challenge, obviously, was working on a soundtrack that already existed. The way we usually do it is, you cut the film, and then you come up with a temp track that kind of feels, that pushes, which is all motion. So I had to reverse engineer the use of it. That was an interesting challenge. And ultimately our composer did a really beautiful job in adapting and changing it a little bit to fit.

Todd told me you have “a great ear” for music and that you’re “very attentive to temp tracks and finding really useful music to cut to.” But this was very different, as composer Marcelo Zarvos adapted Michel Legrand’s score from the 1971 film The Go-Be­tween. It’s like a very strong counterpoint to what we’re watching on screen, and it must have impacted your approach to the edit?
It did. I had to really listen to it and understand what it was doing for the film. It’s like, okay, this applies a bit differently. One part of the process that I love is doing the temp track and finding the music. And finding the music that maybe is not what you expect and maybe in tone. But for this one, Todd had very specific ideas [about how to use the score] that were even in the script, where he had a specific track number that was going to fit with a specific scene. So I just tried it, and sometimes it felt like, wait, this doesn’t seem right to me. But the more I worked on it, the more it was like, okay, now I understand what Todd wants from this.

I could adjust the cutting, or I could get another piece from another cue that actually enhanced the scene a little more. And then you really get to study that piece of music, as there’s a beginning and end, and I can just start a little further in, or end at this point. So you start really trying to maneuver the music to fit what I’m cutting.

Todd has always said he’s a very hands-on guy in the editing.
Yes, he’s right there. Basically, we worked nine to seven, five days a week. Sometimes we worked weekends too, because on top of cutting the film, we were actually cutting a short film for a showing of his films at the Pompidou in Paris. But yeah, he’s by my side from nine to seven. He has notes, and he knows the footage intimately because he studies it. He can be like, ‘On scene six, let’s take a look at take four, and how Julianne reads this line here,’ and that’s how it goes. It’s very, very detailed.

We used Avid Media Composer 2018, QNAP was the server, and then we used Nextcloud to sync files. We had about 4T worth of material.

What was the most difficult scene to cut and why?
I think the most difficult to cut was probably the scene where it’s the first time they all had dinner together, when Elizabeth comes to Gracie’s house, because that was a long dialogue scene. It was actually much longer than it is in the final film. And the challenge was really when to be with whom, because of the coverage. We have the medium closeup of the three of them and the boy, but then the boy leaves, and then it’s just the main wide front or the wide from the back. So it’s just basically finding a way to get to know everybody. And at some point, Joe doesn’t speak, but we have him listening to what was said, and it was so important when we realized we have to be on a silent Joe just reacting to what’s being said there.

It was a week of work just on that, and that’s the scene we probably went back to the most times, like, is this correct, is this precise? Do we have enough of Joe? Even though he doesn’t say too much, are we getting his reaction? There’s so much subtext in his reaction, because when he looks, he reacts to things. And he’s clenching his jaw so much that there’s an effect on the side of his head. So what’s funny was actually using the stuff that’s not being said, and all the stuff being reacted to is where we really had to be very precise. We kept going back to the scene many, many times.

You’ve worked with Todd a long time now. How do you sum this one up compared with some of the other projects you’ve done?
Wow, that’s an interesting question. It was fun and interesting to do something that has more humor than we used to have [in our films]. To play with humor is something that was kind of new for the two of us, and that was exciting. Even though it is a dark story ultimately, I think to be able to play up the humor and understand how to use it was a great experience.


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.

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.

Editor David Gesslbauer Joins London’s The Quarry

Editor David Gesslbauer has joined The Quarry’s London-based roster. An Austria/Berlin native and graduate of the Film Academy Baden-Württemberg, Gesslbauer has already picked up a variety of industry awards during his young career, including Clios and D&AD Wooden Pencils. This year alone, he was on the D&AD Editing shortlist for Born Guilty and won a D&AD Wooden Pencil for his film We Will Become Better for LGBT Network Russia. Gesslbauer also won a Young Director Gold Award for his innovative short Unum, which employed a circular frame. It was shown at the Toronto International Film Festival.

Gesslbauer has cut commercials for Porsche, TikTok, Mercedes, ITV, Schweppes, BMW and Stella Artois and has also edited short films and mini documentaries, the Netflix documentary series A Perfect Crime, and an upcoming feature film.

Gesslbauer edited the Specter Berlin-directed Deutschland music video for Rammstein. A die-hard Rammstein lover, he helped make a hugely popular film that heralded the metal band’s return after a 10-year absence. Over nine minutes long, the video is less a conventional promo and more a cinematic spectacle that spans centuries and delves into the history of Germany.

“I’ve always loved the fantastic work coming from the UK, and I’m thrilled that The Quarry opens that door for me,” says Gesslbauer, who edits on Adobe Premiere. “By joining a roster of editors that I admire, I can’t wait to bring my craft to the next level.”

“We had a recommendation from David’s rep in Germany about David, and after seeing his work, we immediately got in touch,” explains editor/partner Ben Campbell. “Sometimes you look at somebody’s reel and you’re just like, ‘yes!’ From an editor’s POV, it is very clear that he is an exceptional talent. We had a great first chat, and his singular dedication to his craft was as clear as being hit in the face with a fish…a big, juicy, tasty Germanic fish. A fish with great hair. A fish that can also make films better using a computer and his big brain. I am quite excited.”

 

 

 

Editor Mah Ferraz Joins Cut+Run

Mah Ferraz has joined the Cut+Run editorial roster. Her past work includes collaboration with Nike, adidas, Apple Music, Spotify, Instagram, ESPN, Vogue, Marc Jacobs, Volvo, Grey Goose, Marriott and the NFL. Select music-related editorial features artists like Rosalía, A$AP Rocky, Megan Thee Stallion, Burna Boy and Mariah Carey. While based in New York City, Ferraz is available in all locations.

Being a Latina and part of the LGBTQA+ community, Mah often uses her voice to collaborate on work with a powerful social message, such as Oreo’s Proud Parent and Megan Thee Stallion’s New York Times Op-Ed piece, Why I Speak up for Black Women. Mah’s international presence includes work in Brazil, UK, Portugal, Germany and Nigeria, along with Spanish-speaking work from Spain and Puerto Rico.

She learned to cut on Avid and currently works more with Adobe Premiere using Avid shortcuts.

“Editing is my art; it’s the way I express my creativity. I’m very passionate about it and try to add my fingerprint and vision into anything I touch,” says Mah.

In 2019, Mah became the first editor to become a Young Gun. Other Awards and nominations include Webbys, The One Show, ADC, The MVPA, One Screen and Berlin Commercial. Her work has been featured in The New York Times, Nowness, Paper Magazine, Vogue, Elle Magazine, The Atlantic, It’s Nice That and has also been a Vimeo Staff Pick five times.

Editor Emily Spiegelman-Noel Joins Lvly

Lvly, a content and creative studio, has added Emily Spiegelman-Noel to its editorial roster. Spiegelman-Noel, who left Modern Post in 2019, had been freelancing prior to this new post.

Recent work includes Banana Republic’s return to television advertising after a 15-year absence with its “Love the Present” holiday 2020 campaign, as well as Tom Petty’s Leave Virginia Alone music video directed by Adria Petty and Mark Seliger. She has worked with brands such as Dior, YSL, Chaos, Express, Kohl’s, Revlon and Target. Spiegelman-Noel uses Adobe Premiere for editing.

“Emily’s work always feels authentic and human,” says Wendy Brovetto, EVP/MD at Lvly. “Her editorial ability to bring those qualities across all genres, beyond beauty and fashion, caught my attention immediately.”

“It was great to see how Lvly got their arms around every project from the onset,” says Spiegelman-Noel. “They are very buttoned up and proactive. I also value the strength of Lvly’s long-established fashion and beauty presence.”

Spiegelman-Noel, who is based in New York, was born and raised in California and studied politics and filmmaking at the University of California, Santa Cruz and Los Angeles. Prior to joining Lvly, she was rostered at Consulate and Exile Edit in addition to Modern Post.

Final Cut Adds Editor Antonio Gomez-Pan

Editing house Final Cut has added editor Antonio Gómez-Pan to its roster. He will be based out of Final Cut’s Los Angeles office.

Antonio Gómez-Pan was born in Madrid and graduated with a BA degree in film editing from film school ESCAC in Spain. Gómez-Pan has edited advertising projects that have won golds at Cannes Lions and at the Berlin Film Festival.

He has cut many music videos and worked for brands such as Coca-Cola, Nike, Amazon, Adidas, Chanel, North Face, Toyota, IKEA, Samsung and Volkswagen while collaborating with agencies including Leo Burnett, Saatchi & Saatchi, Sid Lee, McCann and JWT. He recently finished a documentary series for Quibi called &Music, directed by the artist, filmmaker and historian, Calmatic, out of production company Prettybird.

Gómez-Pan also edits feature films, including Othello, which won for Best Independent European Movie of the Year at the Paris Film Festival, and Puzzled Love, an Official Selection at the San Sebastián Film Festival. Gomez-Pan was appointed to the Academy of the Spanish Motion Picture Arts & Sciences in 2017.

Gómez-Pan joins other recent Final Cut additions, editor Sam Bould and US managing director Justin Brukman.

 

 

 

Behind the Title: TV & Film Editor Nicholas Wong

Toronto-based Nicholas Wong is a film and TV editor, whose credits include Amazon’s The Expanse and Hulu’s Utopia Falls. He started making short animated films when he was 10, teaching himself Adobe Premiere and Flash. Let’s find out more.

You work in TV and film. Can you describe that process?
In general, editing is a process of assembling raw footage in a sequential order to tell a coherent story or to express a certain idea or emotion. Depending on the project I’m working on, the job could entail much more than that.

Utopia Falls

On a television series, there’s a lot of collaboration. I’m usually one of two or three editors working on the season, and we each handle three or four episodes (depending on the number of episodes in the season). We keep an open dialogue with each other to make sure things are consistent and series arcs are tracking from episode to episode. I’m usually brought onto a series when production starts. They usually shoot in blocks of two episodes consisting of around 14 to 18 days, meaning in that period, they would shoot scenes for two (hour-long) episodes. Scenes are shot out of order, and they would shoot four to five scenes per day. We get the dailies the next day, and I try to keep up with camera and finish those scenes in a day. It’s really easy to fall behind when you’re getting footage every day.

Once the scenes are assembled, I start arranging them in script order. This is the fun part because this is when you really get a sense of whether the episode is working or not. This is also when I start adding temp music and sound effects and really polish the episode before showing it to the director. Working with the director is a collaborative process wherein we make creative changes to mold the episode into the director’s vision. Sometimes this means looking for alternate takes or adjusting pacing.

When the director is finished with his/her cut, I screen the episode with the producer and we refine it some more, sometimes rearranging scenes, cutting out lines or rewriting dialogue. Then we send the producer’s cut to the networks, who then send us notes, and then the producer(s) and I do our best at accommodating them while keeping the creative intent. Meanwhile, usually by this time, I’m getting footage for my next episode, and the process begins again.

Killjoys

What would surprise people the most about what falls under that title?
I think most people would be surprised at how much music and sound work the editor does. A rough cut is so polished these days that it’s pretty much ready to air. Though it’s too bad that there is this kind of expectation now because it makes the job of the music composer and sound team more challenging when they are locked into replicating the temp soundtrack.

What’s your favorite part of the job?
My favorite part is when I’m watching the dailies, and I’m completely lost in a performance. Those are the moments when I don’t feel like I need to cut because my job is already done in the dailies.

Although I also love that sense of accomplishment when you’ve been tackling a scene for hours that just wasn’t working, and then finally it does, and it’s beautiful. That’s my other favorite part, but I have many.

What’s your least favorite?
The politics, making changes to placate someone’s ego rather than for its creative merit. Luckily, I haven’t encountered this too much.

What is your most productive time of day and why?
Probably after lunch; there’s a long stretch of time when I’m locked in my room, and I just edit (if I don’t have food coma).

Dark Matters

If you didn’t have this job, what would you be doing instead?
I would be an Imagineer. It combines my love for storytelling and physics. Everything about the rides at Disneyland tells a story, down to the details you see in the queues. I was also pretty good at RollerCoaster Tycoon.

How early did you know this would be your path?
When I was 10, I wanted to become an animator. I learned Adobe Premiere and Flash to create short animated films. Then my passion morphed into live-action filmmaking. I directed short films, I studied film in university and I interned at a production company that produced Degrassi: The Next Generation. It was when I started assistant editing on that show that I knew I wanted to become an editor. The producers eventually gave me an episode to edit and the rest is history.

Can you name some recent jobs?
The last job I did before the COVID crisis was Season 5 of The Expanse for Amazon. We were lucky that we finished filming right before productions were shut down. My other recent credits are Utopia Falls (Hulu), Code 8, a feature starring Robbie and Stephen Amell, Killjoys (SyFy), Dark Matter (SyFy) and Baroness Von Sketch Show (IFC).

Baroness Von Sketch Show

Do you put on a different hat when cutting for a specific genre?
I find my editing process is rooted in the same principle no matter what the genre is. I’m always cutting to portray a certain emotion. Different genres may have more of one emotion than another, and you edit accordingly. Timing in editing is as important to make someone laugh as it is to make someone cry.

However, I find different genres come with their own unique challenges. For example, in a comedy sketch show, with all the improvisation, the shooting ratio is incredibly high. Sometimes the improv is gold, and sometimes the actors go on a tangent, and you have to guide them back to the punchline. In sci-fi, there’s a lot of temp sound design work that I do, and I have to be aware of all the VFX that will be done to a shot.

Have you been continuing to edit during the COVID crisis?
No. I haven’t been editing through the pandemic, but I’ve been having Zoom meetings with my next production, which is hoping to start up soon. We have new protocols — all work with directors and producers will be done remotely, and the assistant editors will have their own rooms, and there will be a cleaning staff to clean our suites every day.

Luckily, with post, we’re used to working in seclusion, so hopefully it won’t feel too different. I will miss the interaction with my colleagues though.

What system do you edit on?
At the moment, I’m mostly working on Avid Media Composer. I’ve worked with Premiere on a feature, and I used to work a lot with Apple Final Cut Pro 7.

Do you have a favorite plugin?
I’m pretty minimalist with plugins and usually use whatever’s included with Media Composer. Sometimes it can cause problems down the line when we add a cool video effect and the online editors can’t recreate it because they don’t have the same plugin.

Are you often asked to do more than edit?
Yes. On top of editing, I do a lot of music and sound work. I find a temp score and do a pretty detailed sound design. I sometimes write and record temp voiceover, doing my best impression of the character.

What are three pieces of technology you can’t live without?
Let me look in my backpack: a notebook, a pen (it’s a necessity for my job and in life. Whenever I have an idea or I’m brainstorming, I put it on paper) and my laptop.

What do you do to de-stress from it all?
I take a lot of walks, even when the weather is bad and I’m in the middle of an industrial area. My edit suites have always been in windowless rooms, so I need some fresh air and exercise to get through the day. I try to take a walk every time I finish a scene, but usually I can only fit in three walks a day.

The Den adds editor Eric Alexander-Hughes

LA-based editorial boutique The Den has added Eric Alexander-Hughes to its editing team. Alexander-Hughes’ varied portfolio includes documentary, commercial and music video work. He works on Avid Media Composer and Adobe Premiere, depending on the project.

Alexander-Hughes spent the past three years at Final Cut Editorial, where he edited Spotify’s Black History Is Happening Now campaign featuring Pharrell Williams and the 2019 Super Bowl spot “Boy Band,” featuring Chance the Rapper and Backstreet Boys.

Additional work includes editing the hit HBO documentary miniseries The Defiant Ones and dozens of music videos for J. Cole, Selena Gomez, Justin Bieber, Travis Scott, Diddy and Pharrell.

Alexander-Hughes started his editing career at ad agency Pereira O’Dell, where he worked while studying at San Francisco State University.

“I think of editing as a marriage between two elements — classical and jazz,” says Alexander-Hughes. “The first is exact and cerebral, while the second is more freestyle and rooted in a gut feeling. I like to mix the two in my work, adapting to the individual needs of the client and project.”

Editor Greg Mitchels joins Northern Lights

Bi-coastal post and creative company Northern Lights has added editor Greg Mitchels to its team. Mitchels’ experience includes cutting trailers, show launches, upfronts, music videos, behind-the-scenes content and promo campaigns. He comes to Northern Lights after 13 years at Attitude in New York City. He will be working on Avid Media Composer and Adobe Premiere.

Mitchels has concepted and cut Promax-, Emmy-  and Clio-nominated work for A&E, Comedy Central, Amazon, History and Lifetime. He’s also edited PSAs for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund and World Down Syndrome Day.

He just wrapped editing A+E Networks’ annual upfront presentation and is currently working on image spots for Lifetime and Amazon Prime Video.

Behind the Title: Kaboom’s Doug Werby

After starting his career as an editor, Doug Werby transitioned to director as well. He loves when a project combines both of his talents.

Name: Doug Werby

Company: Kaboom

Can you describe what Kaboom does?
Kaboom is a full-creative service production company providing production and post.

Doug Werby on set

What’s your job title?
Director and editor

What does that entail?
Whatever it takes to pull down and execute a project to the highest degree of my ability. It means having a concrete vision from beginning to end and always collaborating with the team. From directing a voiceover session in LA from a remote island off the coast of Croatia to editing at 2am for an east coast 6am delivery. Whatever it takes. I’m an all-in person by nature.

What would surprise people the most about what falls under that title?
That everything I’ve learned in editing I apply to each moment of directing. I started my career as an editor, and it’s about seeing collaborations from different angles and using that to produce creative work efficiently. I believe my strength is in making other peoples ideas better. Shaping the narrative with all the tools and talent available.

What’s your favorite part of the job?
Editing: Cracking open a fresh bin of un-cut dailies in my editing studio when everything is quiet.
Directing: First shot of the first day of shooting.

What’s your least favorite?
Editing: Editing screen captures for app interfaces.
Directing: Late, late-night shoots.

What is your most productive time of day?
After my first cup of coffee at 7:30am til around 11:30am, and then from 8pm to 11pm after a dessert espresso.

If you didn’t have this job, what would you be doing instead?
Origami or pottery, but basically the same thing I already do – shaping things with my hands – but paid commissions are more rarified.

Why did you choose this profession?
It was really the only possible option that made my heart beat faster.

How early did you know this would be your path?
When I was 22 years old. After four years at a liberal arts college, not knowing what the heck to study but always loving film and radio, I made that my focus and, ultimately, my career.

Can you name some recent projects you have worked on?
On the editing front for Kaboom: Campaigns for American Express promoting Wimbledon. This was a “social” project we cut in NYC. It was great fun bringing together celebrity, humor, music, stylized art direction and motion graphics for the small screen.

Wimbledon

The Oakland Airport TV edit for Kaboom. This was a throwback to the days of cutting deadpan mockumentary humor. I love this format and working closely with the creatives, we got the most out of the footage. Plus, I love Oakland Airport.

My two personal short films: For the past few years I’ve been parlaying all my skills from the commercial world and applying them to the scripted drama genre. I’ve come up with a series of real-life stories adapted for film that I’m packaging up to present as a whole. The idea would be to create a series of 10 half-hour programs all dealing with kindness. Individually the films have been honored at multiple film festivals.

The first is called No Tricks, based on a gritty, real-life experience of Julio Diaz that unveils a mugging gone good. Two men from different worlds bring change and some unexpected wisdom.

Motorbike Thief tells a real-life incident that happened to Michael Coffin when he discovered a stranger with his stolen bike. So enraged at the sight, he confronts the assailant in no uncertain terms and just when the situation is about to get out of hand, the anger turns empathetic and an unlikely friendship develops.

Do you put on a different hat when cutting a specific genre?
Completely. When editing spots and promotions, I’m trying to tell the most entertaining story in the shortest amount of time while staying focused on a clear message. When editing scripted material, I’m focused on story beats, character development and performance. Performance trumps all.

Oakland Airport

What is the project you are most proud of?
The work I did as a director with Kaboom for Bank of America via Hill Holiday a few years back for the Special Olympics. Making stars out of unsung heroes and shining a light on how brave these individuals are was a great honor. The films really puts things into perspective and makes you think about what we take for granted.

What do you edit on?
Adobe Premiere Pro is my current weapon of choice, but I would edit on an iPhone, Amiga 500 or a Moviola if need be.

Favorite plugin?
That would be Dope Transitions for Premiere.

Name three pieces of technology you can’t live without?
iPhone, iMac, airplane.

What do you do to destress from it all?
I bike the hills and valleys around the San Francisco Bay Area. I work out as much as possible, and I help my wonderful partner cook and entertain our friends and family. And travel!

Behind the Title: Live Nation Entertainment Editor Hillary Lewis

This Indiana-based editor uses Avid Media Composer at work, Adobe Premiere for personal projects and After Effects for both.

NAME: Indianapolis-based Hillary Lewis

COMPANY: TourDesign Creative/Live Nation Entertainment

CAN YOU DESCRIBE YOUR COMPANY?
We are the post house for all Live Nation artists creating their broadcast, online, print, radio and advertising for concert tours, nationally and internationally.

WHAT’S YOUR JOB TITLE?
Editor

WHAT DOES THAT ENTAIL?
Using the approved ad materials from our art department and approved radio materials from our audio department, we create TV and online commercials using concert footage and/or music videos, adding motion graphics, transitions, color grading, etc. With the approved commercial, we localize and deliver for each market (city) where the tour will perform.

WHAT WOULD SURPRISE PEOPLE THE MOST ABOUT WHAT FALLS UNDER THAT TITLE?
The editors here are jacks-of-all-trades. We don’t have colorists, assistant editors or other post positions that you’d normally find in TV/film post houses. We truly do it all from start to finish.

One of the things that still surprises me is working with artist management teams that give you unusable footage. Whether it be terrible camera work, aspect ratio differences, low resolution, baked-in logos, etc.

A good majority of artist management teams don’t keep a sufficient archive of raw, uncompressed footage of their artist performances. This inevitably backs us into a corner and we’re tasked with finding and ripping usable footage off of YouTube. The humanity!

WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE PART OF THE JOB?
When I have the most possible time to be creative on a new spot. When I can work on one of my favorite artists or bands. And when I can learn new things and put them in my bag of tricks.

WHAT’S YOUR LEAST FAVORITE?
Having to put my name on something I’ve created that I’m not proud of, but that was completely out of my control. For example, a commercial spot that I artistically and creatively didn’t call the shots on.

WHAT IS YOUR MOST PRODUCTIVE TIME OF THE DAY?
For me, there’s a difference between when I’m most productive and when I’m the busiest. We tend to be busiest in the afternoons — from 3pm to 6pm — because we cater to our smaller office on the West Coast. This means the majority of my work is done right before I leave for the day, which often means staying late. But I’m truly more productive in the mornings when the office is less chaotic and when there’s time to be most creative, rather than sacrificing creativity to push a product out in the late afternoon.

IF YOU DIDN’T HAVE THIS JOB, WHAT WOULD YOU BE DOING INSTEAD?
Two things. I’m obsessed with Vox’s explainer videos and would be making similar highly designed, motion-graphics-based content on broad topics such as film/TV, music, FAQs, food, travel, etc.

Or, I’d be a phenomenal post production coordinator/supervisor in film/TV.

HOW EARLY ON DID YOU KNOW THIS WOULD BE YOUR PATH?
I entered college as a business major and knew pretty early on it wasn’t going to be a fulfilling career path for me. I happened to take a new media course to fill elective requirements, and it resonated with me so much I switched my major to new media arts and sciences and have been on the post production path ever since. It hasn’t been easy making a name in this industry, but I’ve never once looked back or had any regrets.

CAN YOU NAME SOME RECENT PROJECTS YOU HAVE WORKED ON?
The most recent artist tours created by TourDesign: Cardi B, Madonna, Khalid, Live Nation $20 National Concert Week, Lewis Black, MasterChef Junior Live!, Mary J. Blige/NAS, Dave Matthews Band, The Head and the Heart… I could go on.

WHAT IS THE PROJECT THAT YOU ARE MOST PROUD OF?
Not a specific work project, but several accomplishments through my side hustles. I’ve also been a panelist at recent conferences speaking on topics like the gender pay gap, post workflow and new trends in AI and machine learning.

Being an integral part of the media production industry and building a vast network of pros through my travels is something I’m extremely proud of.

NAME THREE PIECES OF TECHNOLOGY YOU CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT.
Our Avid Nexis server at work, my stand-up desk and my AirPods.

WHAT SOCIAL MEDIA CHANNELS DO YOU FOLLOW?
The Blue Collar Post Collective on Facebook. I’m also a member and volunteer. BCPC is a nonprofit supporting emerging talent in post by providing mentorships, networking and funding to attend major industry events for pros who make less than the median income of the state they live in. I was one of the recipients of that funding and it was life-changing for me.

Hillary Lewis on panel at NAB for Gals N Gear.

If anyone reading this has questions about the program, reach out to me on Facebook
or Instagram @hillary.dillary. I follow other Facebook pages like I Am a Female Editor!, Avid Editors of Facebook, Post Chat, I Need an Editor, Austin Digital Jobs (I’ll be moving there soon).

DO YOU LISTEN TO MUSIC WHILE YOU WORK? 
If I listen to anything at work it’s either keeping up with current events from talk shows like The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, The Daily Show With Trevor Noah, Last Week Tonight With John Oliver, etc. or Vice News. Or strictly entertaining things like GoT recaps/fan theory videos, SNL, Vox, Funny or Die.

WHAT DO YOU DO TO DE-STRESS FROM IT ALL?
It is extremely high stress! I have to keep my body active during the day, using my stand-up desk in intervals and stretching. I can’t be in the right state of mind if my body feels stiff or sore.

Going to the gym at least two to three nights every week also helps me sleep better, which makes me fresher mentally the next day.

Cooking is a great stress reliever for me as well as a creative outlet. I can try new things and be risky with it. Even if I make a meal that tastes horrible, I know I’ll eventually improve that meal and make something that tastes good. It reminds of something a wise man on Queer Eye once said “Failure is not the opposite of success, it’s a part of it.”

I also love a good beer at the end of the day.

Behind the Title: Exile editor Lorin Askill

Name: Lorin Askill

Company: Exile (@exileedit)

Can you describe your company?
Exile is an editorial and finishing house based in NYC and LA. I am based in New York.

What’s your job title?
Editor

What does that entail?
I take moving images, sound and other raw materials and arrange them in time to create shape and meaning and ultimately tell stories. I always loved the Tarkovsky book title, sculpting in Time. I like to think that is what I do.

What would surprise people the most about what falls under that title?
Probably how much of an all-encompassing creative process it is. As well as editing picture, I source and edit sounds, I experiment with music, I create rough comps and block compositions for VFX, I play with color and place titles. At its best, editing is not only finding the best pieces of footage and ordering them to tell a story, an editor is crafting the whole visual-aural world that will be carried through to the finished piece.

Hyundai

What’s your favorite part of the job?
I love watching the first cut! When you’re excited about a project, you’ve found the gems and assembled your favorite pieces, solved some challenging problems, fudged together some tricky stunt or effects moments (and it’s already working!). Then you put a piece of music under it that (which you know you can’t actually use), and you feel like it has a good shape and runs from start to finish — usually very over length. It’s so much fun getting to this stage, then sitting back, turning the volume up, pressing play and watching it all together for the first time!

What’s your least favorite part?
My least favorite part is then going through and destroying that first cut with boring realities like running length and client requirements… JOKING. I also love the process of tightening and honing a cut to hit all the right notes and achieve the ultimate vision. But there is nothing like watching the first assembly of a project you love.

What is your most productive time of the day?
Probably first thing when I’ve got fresh eyes and I’m solving problems that seemed impossible the day before. Also the very end of the day when you’re in a little delirious zone and you’re really immersed and engrossed. When I’m cutting a music video, I like to pull up the project late at night and give myself the freedom to play because your brain is definitely functioning in a different way, and sometimes it’s really creative.

If you didn’t have this job, what would you be doing instead?
I think I’d photograph landscapes and spread environmental awareness while having food pop-ups in my garden.

Why did you choose this profession? How early on did you know this would be your path?
Ever since I got my first iMac in high school and started speeding up, slowing down and reversing footage in iMovie. I was addicted to it. I was manipulating time and creating stories with images and sound, and it felt like a beautiful combination of visual art and music, both of which I loved and studied. When I realized I could make a living being creative, and hopefully one day make movies. It seemed like a no-brainer.

Sia

Can you name some recent projects you have worked on?
Most recently I’ve been editing a passion project. It’s a short film directed by my brother. It’s a proof-of-concept for a film we’ve been writing together for a long time. Before that I was working on a bunch commercial projects while also cutting musical sequences for a feature film directed by Sia.

What do you use to edit?
I grew up on iMovie and then Final Cut Pro. Now I use Adobe Premiere Pro and find it does exactly what I need it to do.

Name a few pieces of technology you can’t live without.
I hate to say my phone, but it’s undeniable. My laptop for edits on the run. Good headphones. My Hasselblad from the ‘60s.

What do you do to de-stress from it all?
I get into nature whenever possible, and I cook.

ACE celebrates editing, names Eddie Award winners

By Dayna McCallum

On Friday evening, the 69th Annual ACE Eddie Awards were presented at the Beverly Hilton Hotel with over 1,000 in attendance. ACE president Stephen Rivkin, ACE, presided over the evening’s festivities with comedian Tom Kenny serving as the evening’s host (SpongeBob!).

(L-R) Director Peter Farrelly, Bohemian Rhapsody’s John Ottman, ACE

Bohemian Rhapsody, edited by John Ottman, ACE, and The Favourite, edited by Yorgos Mavropsaridis, ACE, won Best Edited Feature Film (Dramatic) and Best Edited Feature Film (Comedy) respectively. Ottman and Mavropsaridis, who are also nominated for the Oscar in film editing, were both first time Eddie winners.

Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse, edited by Robert Fisher, Jr., won Best Edited Animated Feature Film and Free Solo, edited by Bob Eisenhardt, ACE, won Best Edited Documentary (Feature).

Television winners included Kyle Reiter for Atlanta – “Teddy Perkins” (Best Edited Comedy Series for Commercial Television), Kate Sanford, ACE for The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel – “Simone” (Best Edited Comedy Series for Non-Commercial Television), Gary Dollner, ACE for Killing Eve – “Nice Face” (Best Edited Drama Series for Commercial Television), Steve Singleton for Bodyguard – Episode 1 (Best Edited Drama Series for Non-Commercial Television), Malcolm Jamieson and Geoffrey Richman, ACE for Escape at Dannemora – Episode Seven (Best Edited Miniseries or Motion Picture for Television), Greg Finton, ACE and Poppy Das, ACE for Robin Williams: Come Inside My Mind (Best Edited Documentary, Non-Theatrical), and Hunter Gross, ACE for Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown – “West Virginia” (Best Edited Non-Scripted Series), who delivered a very moving acceptance speech in tribute to the late Bourdain.

The Anne V. Coates Student Editing Award went to Boston University’s Marco Gonzalez, who beat out hundreds of competitors from film schools and universities around the country. The Student Editing honor was re-named in honor of the legendary editor who passed away this past year. In another emotional moment, the award was presented by Coates daughter, Emma Hickox, ACE (What Men Want).

Jerrold Ludwig, ACE and Craig McKay, ACE received Career Achievement awards.  Their work was highlighted with clip reels exhibiting their tremendous contributions to film and television throughout their careers.

(L-R) Octavia Spencer, Golden Eddie Honoree Guillermo del Toro

ACE’s prestigious Golden Eddie honor was presented to artist and Oscar-winning filmmaker Guillermo del Toro. He received the award from his friend and collaborator Octavia Spencer, who starred in del Toro’s The Shape of Water last year.

Other presenters at the show included Oscar nominated director Spike Lee (BlacKkKlansman); Oscar nominated director and ACE Eddie Award nominee for Roma, Alfonso Cuarón; director Jon M. Chu (Crazy Rich Asians); director Peter Farrelly (Green Book); D’Arcy Carden (The Good Place); Jennifer Lewis (Black-ish); Angela Sarafyan (Westworld); Harry Shum, Jr. (Crazy Rich Asians); Paul Walter Hauser (BlacKkKlansman); and film editor Carol Littleton, ACE.

Here is the full list of winners:

BEST EDITED FEATURE FILM (DRAMATIC):
Bohemian Rhapsody
John Ottman, ACE

BEST EDITED FEATURE FILM (COMEDY):
The Favourite
Yorgos Mavropsaridis, ACE

BEST EDITED ANIMATED FEATURE FILM:
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse
Robert Fisher, Jr.

BEST EDITED DOCUMENTARY (FEATURE):
Free Solo
Bob Eisenhardt, ACE

BEST EDITED DOCUMENTARY (NON-THEATRICAL):
Robin Williams: Come Inside My Mind
Greg Finton, ACE & Poppy Das, ACE

Killing Eve Editor Gary Dollner, ACE

BEST EDITED COMEDY SERIES FOR COMMERCIAL TELEVISION:
Atlanta – “Teddy Perkins”
Kyle Reiter

BEST EDITED COMEDY SERIES FOR NON-COMMERCIAL TELEVISION:
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel – “Simone”
Kate Sanford, ACE

BEST EDITED DRAMA SERIES FOR COMMERCIAL TELEVISION:
Killing Eve – “Nice Face”
Gary Dollner, ACE

BEST EDITED DRAMA SERIES FOR NON-COMMERCIAL TELEVISION:
Bodyguard – “Episode 1”
Steve Singleton

BEST EDITED MINISERIES OR MOTION PICTURE FOR TELEVISION:
Escape at Dannemora – “Episode Seven”
Malcolm Jamieson & Geoffrey Richman ACE

BEST EDITED NON-SCRIPTED SERIES:
Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown – “West Virginia”
Hunter Gross, ACE

STUDENT WINNER
Marco Gonzalez – Boston University

Main Image Caption: (L-R) Tatiana S. Riegel, ACE, The Favourite’s Yorgos Mavropsaridis, ACE, Paul Walter Hauser.

Nice Shoes welcomes creative editor Marcos Castiel

NYC-based creative studio Nice Shoes has signed creative editor Marcos Castiel for his first US representation. With over two decades of experience as an editor, Castiel has worked with such clients as Coca-Cola, Adidas, Vodafone, ASICS, McDonald’s, Whole Foods, Nivea and Comcast.

Castiel’s work ranges from enigmatic athletic-driven spots — featuring Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi — to narrative spots for international brand campaigns. Castiel will be available via Nice Shoes’ headquarters in New York City as well as any of their satellite or remote locations throughout North America.

Marcos Castiel cut Summer for Portuguese media company NOS.

Castiel entered the filmmaking word with an eye towards directing, but quickly discovered the storytelling power of editing and made the switch. He began his career on the agency side, editing global campaigns at Publicis before moving to the production side where he spent a decade at top production and post houses. Looking to further broaden his creative output, he made the shift to freelance and continued editing top international campaigns.

“Nice Shoes’ vision as a holistic creative studio is very much aligned with my desire for creative diversity in my career,” says Castiel. “Being able to inform my approach with different styles and genres is what helps me continue to partner with clients to elevate their ideas and Nice Shoes truly stands behind that approach.”

Ben Corfield promoted to editor at Stitch in London

Ben Corfield is now a full-fledged editor on the Stitch roster. Having joined the edit house as a Homespun editor a year ago, the London-based Corfield has been working hard on a range of projects. Homespun is the sister company to Stitch. Assistants start editing through Homespun on music videos and short films and then “graduate” to Stitch to work on commercials.

Working on an Avid Media Composer Corfield recently cut a spot for a film for Leica, directed by Barney Cokeliss, involving editing 105 hours of footage for a two-minute spot. At the end of last year, he cut the Sam Smith and Calvin Harris Promises documentary which explores the art of voguing. It was directed by Emil Nava.

Corfield’s initial interest in editing was piqued in the early ’90s while he was watching Terminator 2 on VHS. Inspired after seeing the T 1000 melt through a metal prison gate, he knew then that he somehow wanted to get into film.

“I get to work on the best part of the process as I put it all together to create the finished piece,” says Corfield on the process of editing. “It’s always a privilege to work closely with the director during the edit and see his or her vision in its final form. I’ve already been lucky enough to work with numerous inspirational editors and directors, much of the way I work now is down to what I’ve learnt from them.”

Stitch LA editor cuts first feature doc The Panama Papers

Stitch LA‘s Weston Cadwell has cut his first feature, The Panama Papers for director Alex Winter. This documentary focuses on the coordination of journalists from around the world, working in secret to expose the largest data leak in history. This was a global corruption scandal involving fraudulent power brokers, the uber-rich, elected officials, dictators, cartel bosses, athletes and celebrities who had used the Panamanian law firm of Mossack Fonseca to hide their money. The story cracked open a hidden network of tax evasion, fraud, cronyism, bribing government officials, rigging elections and murder.

Stitch became involved in the film through Dan Swietlik, owner and editor of Stitch LA, who worked with Winter on the feature documentary, Deep Web (2015).

“Alex had a short film project, Relatively Free in 2016. He came to Dan and I worked on the film as a second editor,” explains Weston. “Alex and I worked closely together in the edit bay. I really got to know him, how he works and I think we collaborate really well.

L-R: Editor Weston Cadwell and director Alex Winter.

“I cut a short film with him a year later, Trump Lobby (2017) and then Alex came to us with the feature film and requested me as the sole editor. This would be my first feature film, so I was nervous to take it on but was honored to have the opportunity.”

For this film, there was a huge amount of archive footage to get through, including news bytes, conferences and speeches related to income inequality, shell companies, tax loopholes and similar. There were a lot of topics and themes to cover, and Weston had to be fully educated and immersed in these fields.

Given the amount of footage in the project, the role of the editor and his relationship with the director, was of particular importance. “I had my team. I mean, I have a production company, with researchers, archivists, production coordinators and so on, and we all kind of worked as a hive mind,” says Winter. “Really, a doc is made mostly by me and the editor, so, I was working very closely with Wes. This was an extremely complicated story, with many disparate elements and characters to weave together, and he did an incredible job, not only helping to make the film comprehensible but also emotional and dramatic”

“One of the challenges was just figuring out how we wanted to tell the story, there were a lot of moving parts to the journalists investigation, so we wanted to keep it simple and linear so the viewer could easily follow,” says Weston.

“I found it interesting that we kept our project secret the same way the journalists had to keep their investigation secret for a whole year while they uncovered everything.”

The film premiered internationally at the IDFA film festival last month and is streaming in the US on Epix.