E25 - How to Edit Dialogue for a Movie Scene - Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2018
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- Опубликовано: 3 июн 2018
- Theis tutorial is showing how dialogue is shot and edited. It shows techniques such as back-timing, L-Cuts and J-cuts, and cutaways for reaction shots.
Here is the practice footage:
drive.google.com/file/d/1dy8n... - Хобби
Thanks, I like that you showed the script and camera angles then brought it home with the edits.
Probably the best available tutorial on this subject on the internet . Many thanks for your work in producing this .
This is a WEALTH of information. Thank you!
Gave me some great ideas on how to approach editing a scene I am working on. Always interesting how many different ways this art can tackled. THANKS CHINFAT! Just subscribed!.
This is the video I was searching for a long time.... Thanks a lot
Extremely helpful tutorial. Practical and well presented encompassing really useful use of tools and paced so you can actually follow it!
great tutorial, many thanks for the practice files as well!
This was so simple, straight on and pedagogical! Thank you!
I'd like to thank you for this great introduction to film-making.
I'm amazed at how you give such a perfect explanation in so little time.
Great tutorial with advanced j cuts and l cuts
Thank you SO MUCH!!!!! The only channel on RUclips that goes so in depth.
really liked your process flow.
Very, very good!! Thanks for making this.
really good tutorials! thanks!
This is GREAT! Thank you very much
You made it so easy. Thank you !!
our best favorite video on youtube ever
Thanks sir actually we were going to shoot a short film so your video helped a lot for me being a cinematographer and editor 😊😊
Majority of my filmmaking process questions were answered from this one video .. lol I’ve watched so many other videos for different things. I CAME HERE looking for answers on here to edit dialogue for movies/ films. But also had questions on how many times do actors play out the scene from different angles and takes, the whole scene ?etc.. then how do you sync Audio with all these different cuts and takes of the same scene. Hear some one else audio in the others persons over the shoulder shot etc.. then jump to the other person etc.. YOU HAVE BEEN A BIG HELP.. I’ma a cinematographer background in music videos NOW going into film production and editing. ALSO I’m filming a short film wearing many different hats but would really like to have this fluidity with cuts audio and syncing dialogue to match with video footage. I have a storyboard full a sequences and shots so I kind of know where the cuts from different angles need to be and how the shot is composed. I GUESS theres a reason why movies take a long time to film.. AS MANY TAKES AS POSSIBLE TO GET IT RIGHT.
Thanks for the tip sir. Very useful information
This is exactly what I was looking for, thank you so much...
Hi @chinfat ... thanks alot for these tutorials, I have learnt much from your videos!....I have a question. How do you go about choosing to use the lav or boom from dialogue when the actors are being recorded using both mics?
thanks so much bro! this is exactly what i was looking for. you answered all the questions i had!
love it!
Thanks you for the good explanation.
Really useful. I am using Avid, but was able to apply same techniques and having the footage to download was a real bonus. Thanks
Very cool. Yeah... the techniques aren't different. Same concept. I used to do assistant editing on an Avid. Haven't used it for a while though.
Thanks for watching.
Awesome job!
great tutorial right there!
very detailed video thank you
Great work !
Helpful, thanks!
Awesome 👍 tutorial
Super helpful. Thank you
Another great instrucion
Very Awesome
AMAZING!
Thank you very much very helpful
Thats very helpful sir... thanks
Great job. Merci.
Exactly what I was looking for. 😉
Do you eventually slip the dialogue of your actors, (say you had 3 in the scene.) to their own audio tracks, ever?? Thanks for video.
good job
Hello Chinfat. Can I ask you a question irrelevant to the video above? I'm working on premiere pro cs6 and I'm trying to work an mxf sequence which was exported from cc 17. The thing is, it stucks all the time and at the end the program shuts down by its own. I tried opening the sequence alone in another project, without any other sequences, but after a while I still got the error message. Any suggestions please?? Thank you in advance.
you are very good thx alot
Hello! Loved the video. But the .Mxf files ain't playing in the Google Drive link you provided even after downloading them.
Can you provide with the full movie rushes to edit and not just of this one scene ?
Excenlente!!!
how do you make the pannel on the left corner appear fully do you double click on the video cause when I do it it doesn't work can somebody help me?
How would I edit if say I used PluralEyes to sync and all the shots are in the same timeline?
Thank you
Brilliant guide! The only guide I’ve seen on RUclips that properly teaches how to edit dialogue in post👍
Just got a question about combining the footage - when you switch from Brian to Paul how come there wasn’t any abrupt audio stops? Since the audio was essentially recorded separately ?
Additionally, what if Brian decides to walk around the room during his dialogue ?
That's what the portion of this tutorial on L-Cuts and J-Cuts is doing. Those help to cut to the next angle while the audio extends through the cut. If a character walks around the walk, then the boom operator would have to extend the boom and follow over the head of the character.
chinfat So I should follow the actor with the camera whilst he’s walking around? Do I just apply the same concept as your video shows even if the actor is walking ?
@@AdaptedStudios Yes. You can follow the same concept. If the actor walks, the camera can pan, tilt, be on a dolly, go hand-held. You'd likely shoot a wide master (the audio usually is not as good on the wide shots) and then a medium shot or close up. on that same actor. The mic would follow the actor, wherever they walk while they are on camera.
chinfat Ok thanks for the input. And what about the second actor during the walk of the first actor? Should I keep him slightly in frame as you would do in a OTS? ?
@@AdaptedStudios Typically, if the 2nd actor just walks in front, if they are facing away from the camera, you'd get their audio on the OTS, yes. Sometimes, the camera may switch from one actor to another in one shot. In that case, the mic would change from actor to actor as the camera does so. In more complex situations, where there are multiple actors and interruptions and overlapping dialogue, hidden wireless on each actor would be required. Then you need a sound cart with a mixer and recorder that is capable of recording multiple channels.
thank cằm béo.. you are the best teacher onl
cằm béo. my new name!
@@chinfat translate to vietnam is" cằm béo "..
@@racingboyhanoi I hope you are well.
SubsFirst of all really nice Content. I am starting right now with PremierePro, learning the basics and you are helping me pretty well. Subscription checked!
Is the practice footage still available, because I cannot find it with the link?
Thank you!
I've started doing that on my recent episodes because of many requests. If it's available, I put the links in the description.
chinfat nice, thank you! And keep on striving
nice tutorial, but i think multicam editing will be the best for dialog editing, this process will take a whole lot of time to edit a complete movie
In some instances... yes. But you will compromise the art of cinematography by having to change the angle to not see the other camera(s). DP's will argue that they want every shot to be perfectly composed to tell the story. If you go multicam, you are compromising the shots... even if it's a subtle compromise. This comes from the preachings of many professional cinematographers. ruclips.net/video/Q5fmLe6kRnE/видео.html
@@chinfat Thanks for clarification, i will be following this your process, since you said that is the best industry standard.
Great and helpful info. Thanks. Question if you know it, I'm helping someone with a comedy sitcom, using low-no budget. They have one maaaaybe two iPhones. 10 or so people have dialogues. What is the best way to shoot everyone from ? angles to be able to knock this out in a day? thanks!
It depends. If the project is more improv or sitcom style, if you have two iPhones, you could shoot over the shoulder for the 2 subjects. Just angle the phones, so they cannot see the other camera. If it's blocked out and no improv (dialogue is memorized and movement will be identical for each setup), you can shoot two phones side by side (one medium shot, one close up) and that's a way to knock out 2 angles at once.
@@chinfat Thanks. So, the thing is that there is one iPhone, (possibly two) the lead, the teacher is MC/lead, but there will be like 10 students doing dialogue. Not only 2. How would I be able to get all the angles w/out shooting the whole episide 10 times, LOL. ? :)
What happens when you have two people speaking over each other, like an argument. So if you’re using the track for Person A, you’ll still be able to hear Person B’s lines being delivered. If you want Person B to say something at the same time as Person A, how do you use Person B’s track while still keeping it in sync with the same lines that can be heard in the background of Person A’s
In that case, it's best to use a wireless setup on the actors, which is quite common on sets these days. The mics are recorded as individual tracks. It's also a good idea to have the actors rehearse the scene a lot, so they have the timing down pat. That will make it a lot easier on the editor.
this is a great tutorial thank u! i do have a question though... i see how you managed to play around with the audio but i don't understand how you can do that in case that both characters are shouting at each other or speaking at the same time, in that the audio/video can be a mess and even impossible to connect together and show many angles at the same dialogue am i right?
In a case with a scene wherever everyone is talking/yelling over each other, every actor would have to have a wireless mic on their person. The audio recordist would record each mic to its own isolated channel. They may even decide to shoot the scene with 2 to 3 cameras as well. It helps enormously to have the actors block and rehearse and then.... DO NOT CHANGE OR IMPROV ANY LINES. Once they've nailed they blocking, they have to do it the exact same for each take. Professional screen actors become really really good at that. It worse comes to worse in the edit, they may bring the actors in you a looping/adr session after the edit has been finished.
@@chinfat i was hoping for an easy fix 😂 thanks man
thanks sir
Is this a re-upload?
I got my hopes up for nothing :(
Video is good btw!
Not a re-upload. Updated and redone. I added the new feature of JKL on-the-fly dynamic trimming which was added to Premiere last year (thanks to Walter Murch's request to Adobe). Thanks for watching!
can anyone link chinfat vid about separate audio files and matching them up in PP? This channel seems awesome. I love how he tells us the keybnoard shortcuts, its like I remember thorugh audio and not visual charts
ruclips.net/video/yJhs8bWsF8I/видео.html
Hopefully, this is the one you are looking for.
Best
what mic did you use? sounds amazing
For my voice over or for the scene of dialogue? I used the Razor Kraken 7.1 V2 Gaming headset. For the dialogue scene, we used an AKG Compact Supercardioid Condenser Microphone C430.
@@chinfat dialogue scene..and thank you..sounds great
@@GleezoVision Cool. Thanks for watching.
how can i do match line in DaVinci?
What screen recording software did you used sir ?
OBS. Free and works wonderfully. obsproject.com/
can you update the link please and thank you
Hi, I've seen the Drive folder with the footage is not the anymore. Is possible to get it? Thanks in advance
drive.google.com/file/d/13BTQqJ3dDXyZQPTS8zrRqfvGIRcKAb6S/view?usp=sharing
@@chinfat You have been very kind, really. Many many thanks. I'm learning to edit with DaVinci Resolve. Thousands of tutorials of tips about editing techniques, but very very few about something so neccesary as narrative and grammar of editing, all those concepts you are teaching us. Thanks again!
@@roryrandom8339 Thanks for watching.
How are you gonna remove the hissing sound when there's no dialogue?
You might have to use DeNoise, DeHum, or some other noise reduction tool. Maybe even EQ.
hey chinfat is that u pushing the cart man?
It is me. Rock on.
google drive link down.plz update link
Link is now updated.
the google drive link files have mxf files that are audio only
I just tested them. They seem to work fine when i import them into Premiere. The will not play back in Windows Media Player, VLC, or Quicktime. they need to be played back in premeire.
@@chinfat what about final cut pro x
@@leaper1983 Ahhh.... crud. Yes. FCP X supports MXF with version 10.1.4. Are you up-to-date? You also need to update your codecs. Follow the instructions from the following video: ruclips.net/video/uISe-lR5sSc/видео.html
@@chinfat I have the newest version of FCP X at 10.4.4. How do I update my codecs?
the ripple training video mentions the pro video formats update. I believe I have it already. I downloaded a link to it and it says it can't be installed because i have the newest version of fcp x
Want more free footages.
When I play the video in the source panel, the audio is okay. But when I step backward/ forward I cannot hear the audio, so I cannot find where my speech starts. Do you happen to know how to fix it? Thank you!
Try going under the preferences, then under the Audio section and make sure 'Play audio while scrubbing' is check-marked. Hopefully that does it.
@@chinfat I got it. Thank you so so much!
ok thanks boomer
You're welcome, Trump supporter.