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| A Beautiful Mind |
On the Attributes of a Good Editor
MH: Decisiveness. Confidence. Being able to set your ego aside, because an editor doesn’t always get stroked a lot. Most things you hear are criticisms. So you need to have a thick skin and not take things personally. That’s a crucial thing for an editor to learn.
On Learning Through Watching
MH: I think that it’s always good to look at other films and just try to see what they’ve done. I think you can learn a lot, even subconsciously, about timing and rhythm and that kid of thing.
On the Director-Editor Collaboration
MH: One of the big things with Ron is collaboration: he needs it, wants it and requires it. He’s not the kind of director who dictates everything. He is the kind of director who wants input from as many people as possible, and he’s very good at evaluating the input.
DH: I like that fact that, and maybe it’s a part of getting older and more self-confident, I can be totally honest. Even outside of my work with Ron, there is a way to just be honest that’s not argumentative or demeaning.
On the Importance of Seeing the Script
DH: We start early on in the process; over the years Ron has had us read early drafts of the scripts and give general notes on it. Then, as new drafts are written we might give ever more specific notes on what we feel needs to change, or what isn’t working.
On Digital Technology
MH: AVID has made me more willing to experiment. You take more chances because nothing is locked in. You can do as many versions as you want, so you can try a lot of things. You stumble on good ideas in a way that you never would have before.
DH: It’s also a bit of a Pandora’s box, too, because you can get so many versions going that you can get blinded by it.
On Maturing as an Editor
DH: I’ve learned to see what I’m working on in the context of the overall movie. I can remember earlier on in my career when it came time to cut out my scenes, you take it personally, ’You can’t lose that scene!’, and you start fighting for the scene instead of considering the movie as a whole and where it fits, or doesn’t fit. I mean, if the director is willing to lose a scene and sees it as necessary to cut it, then what are you fighting for? If it’s not necessary, be willing to realize that and move on. And still be willing to give a strong point of view when you do not agree. Definitely be honest.

