Stefan Scharf - Editing
Stefan Scharf - Editing
Stefan Scharf - Editing
Rules of Editing (1 of 7)
Never make a cut without a positive
reason.
It is unwise to cut film adhering to arbitrary
principles, such as keeping all shots under a
certain length.
Rules of Editing (2 of 7)
When undecided about the exact
frame to cut on, cut long rather than
short.
It is much easier to trim a bit of excess duration
than to splice more on to increase duration.
Rules of Editing (3 of 7)
Whenever possible, cut in movement.
The concept here is that during movement of
any kind, be it a man sitting down on a park
bench or a woman darting her eyes to the left,
cut in the space between the beginning and
end of the action so as to mask the cut.
Rules of Editing (4 of 7)
The fresh is preferable to the stale.
In order to maintain the invisibility of technique,
a film editor strives to avoid boring, confusing,
or disappointing the audience with a poorly
managed cut.
Rules of Editing (5 of 7)
All scenes should begin and end with
continuing action.
It is entirely unnatural to begin a scene with an
actor doing nothing, preparing to act.
Rules of Editing (6 of 7)
Cut for proper values rather than for
proper matches.
Often enough in production, the action between
takes and different angles will not match with
one another. While this is no concern at all
when you leave a shot alone, this lack of
continuity becomes extremely problematic
when you must intercut frequently between
different shots.
Rules of Editing (7 of 7)
Substance first -- then form.
More of a summary rule than anything else.
Rules of Editing (7 of 7)
Substance first -- then form.
More of a summary rule than anything else.
Hitchcock:
The Birds
Eisenstein:
The Battleship Potemkin