An Introduction to Film

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

384 CHAPTER 8EDITING


been that way ever since I was a kid.” As the cam-
era circles Rocket, suggesting that he’s trapped,
the editor allows him to “escape” by using a
match-on-action cut to a shot of a much younger
Rocket moving in a circle. This ends the movie’s
first sequence.
To understand the editing of any movie, we need
to answer these three questions:



  1. What action occurs in the scene under
    analysis?

  2. How has the scene been photographed?

  3. What editing pattern holds the shots
    together?


If we know the answers to these questions, we can
reach conclusions about the editing. As for the first
question, we have described the basic action of this
sequence and how it establishes several of the
movie’s major themes. Second, we have briefly
summarized its cinematographic plan, which
includes the use of a moving handheld camera and
furtive camera angles, and reflects the bold, you-


are-there graphic style of the documentary cinema.
Third, the key elements of the editing pattern that
hold all this footage together are fast and slow
motion, freeze-frames, swish pans, and a montage
influenced by the editing principles of the Soviet
silent cinema. (Elsewhere in the movie, the editor
uses the split screen, fast fade-ins/fade-outs, and
superimpositions.)
Finally, what conclusions do we reach about the
editing? First, we see that the editor’s goal was to
create a highly formal structure, one in which the
cinematic conventions used are suited to the depic-
tion of a violent youth/drug culture. These conven-
tions add up to a coherent formal whole, with none
being more (or less) important than the others.
Second, the editor grabs and holds our attention on
the violence. Third, the filmmakers, who are not
out to make us squirm with disgust at the squalor
and violence or feel guilty about the injustice of this
Brazilian city—ironically called the “City of God”—
make us not only see but feelthe life depicted on the
screen.

Analyzing Editing


When we watch a movie, we see the mise-en-scène,
design, and acting; we hear the dialogue, music, and
sound effects; but we feel the editing, which has the
power to affect us directly or indirectly. Good
editing—editing that produces the filmmakers’
desired effects—results from the editor’s intuition
in choosing the right length of each shot, the right
rhythm of each scene, the right moment for cutting
to create the right spatial, temporal, visual, and
rhythmic relationships between shots A and B. In
answer to the question “What is a good cut?” Wal-
ter Murch says,

At the top of the list is Emotion... the hardest
thing to define and deal with. How do you want
the audience to feel?If they are feeling what
you want them to feel all the way through the
film, you’ve done about as much as you can

ever do. What they finally remember is not the
editing, not the camerawork, not the perform-
ances, not even the story—it’s how they felt.^11

As a viewer, you can best understand the overall
effects of an editor’s decisions by studying a film as
a creative whole. But you can most effectively ana-
lyze an editor’s contributions to a film by examining
individual scenes, paying attention to the ways in
which individual shots have been edited together.
Indeed, the principles of editing are generally most
evident within the parts that make up the whole.

(^11) Walter Murch, In the Blink of an Eye: A Perspective on
Film Editing(Los Angeles: Silman-James Press, 1995),
p. 18.

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