WalterMurchWorking

How to Start Editing Like a PRO

How to Start Editing Like a PRO

To start an edit like a pro, first you must to acknowledge that real PROS do have a method when they go around an edit but it is not a formula. This means that the method that an editor may use may not always work. That is the real why they are PROS and they edit like a PRO.

Most begginers may find the task very daunting at first but they eventually develop a method. This not a bad thing, in fact this is what pro editors actually do. Method helps to start right away editing without falling in the begginers trap of thinking that you cannot do it because it is too much material to edit, so little time, excuses, excuses and more excuses. (The more time you invest in imagining excuses the more excuses you’ll come up with and the more elaborated they’ll be)

Meanwhile, PROS, by having a method, the second they get the material, they apply their method which is actually like saying fuck-off to all excuses.

That is the real difference between a PRO and an amateur or begginer. It is what separates people who do this for fun and people who build a career in the industry.

Methodology of a PRO editor

For this section of the post we’ll go through one of the most influential film editor of the twentieth century, Walter Murch, and how he goes around an edit of a film.

So,

How does Walter Murch edit his films in Premiere Pro? Read this!

Step by step guide for becoming a PRO Editor

What he does essentially is start the edit by scenes, little chunks and try small pieces out while keeping track of the whole. He usually zooms out of what he is doing if he is lost to remember the emotional impact that that scene in particular has to have. Then when he has edited a scene, he doesn’t judge too strongly if it’s good or bad edited. He leaves that scene for a while, continues with another one and after he has done something different he will usually come back and revise that first scene he did.

When he has repeated this process for a while you end up with multiple options that you, as an editor, could choose from. To solve this problem what he does is:

  • Export his timeline: this will create another video (by the way, export only video, no audio) that he will use later on.
  • Import the new video: (which is the video that he has in his timeline but all in one piece. I hope that makes sense.) He will import the new video into his timeline and put it just on top of all the videos that he has on his timeline. Just to be clear, the new video plays all the old pieces of video of his timeline but only in one video file. (Premiere reads the video files from top to bottom so this way your computer won’t be reading all the little pieces of video that you’ve cut and edited, but only the big video that is already edited that plays as a one whole video file)

So, all of this nonsense for what?!

The answer is quite simple.

If you do this, when you come back to edit one of those scenes that you’ve edited but you are not quite sure it is the definitive cut and you want to come back and edit it, by cutting the big video file, you’ll know where have you changed your original edit.

There is a great video, by Walter Murch, where he explains his process and what I have already tried to explain above. Anyway he is a great speaker and illustrates his points with images!

So check it out!



deadpool

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Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on Edit your feature film in ONE vs SEVERAL Premiere Pro projects

Edit your feature film in ONE vs SEVERAL Premiere Pro projects When it comes to editing a YouTube video it’s clear. You would do only one Premiere project where you would edit the whole thing as it is a 10 minute video. But what if that video wasn’t a YouTube video and instead it was […]





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Why the Director Should Be the Editor of the Film

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Why the Director Should Be the Editor of the Film Sean Baker. The Florida Project. David Lean. In which we serve. A passage to India (Oscar nomination for editing) David Lynch (2 features). Eraserhead. Inland empire. Shane Carruth (2 features). Primer. Upstream Color. The Coen Brothers (14 features). They have edited all of their films […]





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Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on 2 Reasons Why Storyboarding Will Make YOUR Life While Editing Easier

2 Reasons Why Storyboarding Will Make Your Life While Editing Easier You want to simplify as much as you can the editing process because what you want is, if you are an independent filmmaker, get your vision, your story cristal clear. For that the only way around it is work and planning. And how you […]





WalterMurchWorking

How to Start Editing Like a PRO

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on How to Start Editing Like a PRO

How to Start Editing Like a PRO To start an edit like a pro, first you must to acknowledge that real PROS do have a method when they go around an edit but it is not a formula. This means that the method that an editor may use may not always work. That is the […]





Creative-Editing

How To Organize An Edit

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on How To Organize An Edit

How To Organize An Edit You finished shooting and have started editing So you have already stored and organized your footage in folders in a external hard drive and you are about to begin your edit. What should you do? Should you import everything into a Premiere project or edit by chunks and in the […]





Creative-Editing

How To Organize An Edit

How To Organize An Edit

You finished shooting and have started editing

So you have already stored and organized your footage in folders in a external hard drive and you are about to begin your edit. What should you do? Should you import everything into a Premiere project or edit by chunks and in the end paste it all together?

Well, if you have a computer that is able to process 4k footage like a piece of cake and you have fast hard drives that can process those videos like a beast, then do not hesitate, edit in a single project. This way you won’t be looking around for that scene that you are certain you’ve edited but you don’t find. As well, if you edit the whole movie in a single project you can be sure that you know where you have made some changes in the project if you use Walter Murch’s technique of having an exported video of your project on top of your timeline. This way, every time you change something in the edit (as Premiere reads video files from top to bottom) you have to open that skin to make the changes. But Walter Murch’s technique is another whole topic for another post.

If your computer isn’t able to process so much data, edit by scenes and paste them together eventually.

Premiere Pro editing organization tips

Now, you have opened a new Premiere project to edit your film and there are no bins, no videos, no audio, no organization what do you do?

First, create bins to organize your project:

  • Video (V): in here you will import your videos. In this bin you can create as well bins for the number of scenes or sequence and inside them, bins for A Cam and B cam.
  • Audio (A): in here you want to follow strictly the same organization for all your processed audio files than for your already organized video files. This way you will find the video that matches that specific audio you didn’t name correctly as fast as possible.
  • Visual effects (VFX): if you use Adobe After Effects for a scene in your movie where you some kind of visual effects with a green screen or what not, this is where you will store those files. If you are editing in one Premiere Pro project, I would recommend to have the same organization you did with your video and audio files.
  • Graffic Effects (GFX): in this bin you will store titles, credits, adjustment layers, logos, motion graphicsu2026
  • Voice Over (VO): in this bin you will store all the already processed voice overs audio files of your scene or film project.

From this template you can personalize whatever you’d like. The goal here is to be as organized as possible so when you are looking for something you don’t spend 15 minutes each time to find an audio or video file in your project.

If you are editing the whole film in only one project, you could have all the videos in one file where you could do 2 separate bins: one for archive and the other one for selection. This way you don’t loose time when searching for the good video files for a particular scene.

The same goes for the audio bin.

Happy edit! See you next time!




deadpool

Edit your feature film in ONE vs SEVERAL Premiere Pro projects

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on Edit your feature film in ONE vs SEVERAL Premiere Pro projects

Edit your feature film in ONE vs SEVERAL Premiere Pro projects When it comes to editing a YouTube video it’s clear. You would do only one Premiere project where you would edit the whole thing as it is a 10 minute video. But what if that video wasn’t a YouTube video and instead it was […]





image-w1280

Why the Director Should Be the Editor of the Film

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on Why the Director Should Be the Editor of the Film

Why the Director Should Be the Editor of the Film Sean Baker. The Florida Project. David Lean. In which we serve. A passage to India (Oscar nomination for editing) David Lynch (2 features). Eraserhead. Inland empire. Shane Carruth (2 features). Primer. Upstream Color. The Coen Brothers (14 features). They have edited all of their films […]





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Why Having A YouTube Channel Will Boost Your Editing Skills

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on Why Having A YouTube Channel Will Boost Your Editing Skills

Why Having A YouTube Channel Will Boost Your 2 Most Important Editing Skills How Much Editors actually Edit? Do most editors edit all of the time or do they just edit when it is necessary for a project? Well most editors do not make a living of just editing movies and feature length films. Most […]





hero-md

2 Reasons Why Storyboarding Will Make YOUR Life While Editing Easier

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on 2 Reasons Why Storyboarding Will Make YOUR Life While Editing Easier

2 Reasons Why Storyboarding Will Make Your Life While Editing Easier You want to simplify as much as you can the editing process because what you want is, if you are an independent filmmaker, get your vision, your story cristal clear. For that the only way around it is work and planning. And how you […]





WalterMurchWorking

How to Start Editing Like a PRO

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on How to Start Editing Like a PRO

How to Start Editing Like a PRO To start an edit like a pro, first you must to acknowledge that real PROS do have a method when they go around an edit but it is not a formula. This means that the method that an editor may use may not always work. That is the […]





Creative-Editing

How To Organize An Edit

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on How To Organize An Edit

How To Organize An Edit You finished shooting and have started editing So you have already stored and organized your footage in folders in a external hard drive and you are about to begin your edit. What should you do? Should you import everything into a Premiere project or edit by chunks and in the […]





hard-drive

Store Those Dailies DAILY?

Store Those Dailies DAILY?​!

Imagine you have finished your day of shooting, should you store and organize your footage right away?

Almost everything of the process of filmmaking is up to the person doing the job really,

BUT

Let’s not be fools and analyze if this is a good habit or not.

CONS:

  • Time spent after an intense day of shooting when what you really want is seat in your couch and chill.
  • Work remembering which videos were from which scene and storing them in named folders, by sequeneces or scenes, or both.

PROS:

  • u00a0Time saved. When you start the editing process you won’t have to go over an infinite pile of videos, hours of work to find out that most of them are of no use. You will be able to find any particular sequence only by knowing which scenes they include, which you know because you have properly made your shooting script.u00a0
  • You can edit easily any given scene so you know what has to be reshooted and what scenes work or not. If they do not, if you edit them by chunks you can really test if they work or not by themselves and what does that story unit mean.
  • u00a0You can edit during production more easily when you have some time to spare. By organizing every day your footage, you can easily one given day that you have an hour to spare edit a particular scene and get ahead faster. If you do this frequently you will have a more clear vision of what is the rythm of the edit, what you want to show or not to show and in the end what you want to tell with this scene.
  • By editing by scenes you can afterwards join more easily two or more scenes together to make a sequence. Because you have thought about each scene individually and you have reached to a conclusion on what you want to tell with each scene, it is easier to blend those two principal ideas together than follow a lead that maybe won’t work with what you subconsciously thought the next scene was all about.

Sum-up

This is why I edit at the same time I film, but then again, this is my personal take on the process. Each person should test themselves and see if an immersive editing sesion without knowing where to go is better than an organized process that takes a lot of thought and hours. Or the other way around. So test yourselves with editing but certainly organize your videos every day after shooting because a simple habit can go a LONG way…



deadpool

Edit your feature film in ONE vs SEVERAL Premiere Pro projects

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on Edit your feature film in ONE vs SEVERAL Premiere Pro projects

Edit your feature film in ONE vs SEVERAL Premiere Pro projects When it comes to editing a YouTube video it’s clear. You would do only one Premiere project where you would edit the whole thing as it is a 10 minute video. But what if that video wasn’t a YouTube video and instead it was […]





image-w1280

Why the Director Should Be the Editor of the Film

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on Why the Director Should Be the Editor of the Film

Why the Director Should Be the Editor of the Film Sean Baker. The Florida Project. David Lean. In which we serve. A passage to India (Oscar nomination for editing) David Lynch (2 features). Eraserhead. Inland empire. Shane Carruth (2 features). Primer. Upstream Color. The Coen Brothers (14 features). They have edited all of their films […]





maxresdefault (1)

Why Having A YouTube Channel Will Boost Your Editing Skills

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on Why Having A YouTube Channel Will Boost Your Editing Skills

Why Having A YouTube Channel Will Boost Your 2 Most Important Editing Skills How Much Editors actually Edit? Do most editors edit all of the time or do they just edit when it is necessary for a project? Well most editors do not make a living of just editing movies and feature length films. Most […]





hero-md

2 Reasons Why Storyboarding Will Make YOUR Life While Editing Easier

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on 2 Reasons Why Storyboarding Will Make YOUR Life While Editing Easier

2 Reasons Why Storyboarding Will Make Your Life While Editing Easier You want to simplify as much as you can the editing process because what you want is, if you are an independent filmmaker, get your vision, your story cristal clear. For that the only way around it is work and planning. And how you […]





WalterMurchWorking

How to Start Editing Like a PRO

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on How to Start Editing Like a PRO

How to Start Editing Like a PRO To start an edit like a pro, first you must to acknowledge that real PROS do have a method when they go around an edit but it is not a formula. This means that the method that an editor may use may not always work. That is the […]





Creative-Editing

How To Organize An Edit

Ale Fito POSTPRODUCTION Leave a Comment on How To Organize An Edit

How To Organize An Edit You finished shooting and have started editing So you have already stored and organized your footage in folders in a external hard drive and you are about to begin your edit. What should you do? Should you import everything into a Premiere project or edit by chunks and in the […]