The 7 Laws of Film Editing
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- Опубликовано: 16 авг 2019
- Film & video editing commandments hereby passed to us through Vashi Nedomansky, ACE.
Do you want to learn how to start any edit like feature film and documentary editors do it? Please visit: www.secreteditinghacks.com
Vashi was one of many people at Adobe that helped Gone Girl happen. He specifically trained editorial team members in transitioning to Premiere Pro in preparation for post-production. Check out this video that gives you a Behind The Scenes on the workflow of the film: • Behind the Scenes on G...
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Nedomansky's company VashiVisuals has provided post-production workflow, consulting services and Premiere Pro training for numerous projects including: Deadpool, Gone Girl, The Good Doctor and House of Cards. Vashi has also trained fellow ACE film editors in transitioning to Adobe Premiere Pro including: Kirk Baxter, Angus Wall, Billy Fox, Don and Dean Zimmerman, Julian Clarke, Nicolas De Toth, Jon Corn, John Venzon, Joan Sobel, Bruce Green and many more.
Vashi has edited 11 feature films including the global phenomenon "Sharknado 2", the comedy "An American Carol" for director David Zucker (Airplane, Scary Movie) and the PTSD documentary "That Which I Love Destroys Me" for director Ric Roman Waugh (Snitch, Felon). He also edited "6 Below", the first native 6K feature film in Hollywood history.
Vashi has collaborated on projects with: Jerry Bruckheimer, Michel Gondry, John Landis, Dennis Hopper, 20th Century Fox, Sony, Universal Studios, Warner Bros. and Disney Studios.
Originally, he defected from Czechoslovakia as a child during the Cold War and grew up in Toronto and Detroit. Following his career as a professional hockey player, Vashi has been a film editor in Los Angeles since 2001.
Follow Vashi:
Website - vashivisuals.com/home/
Twitter - / vashikoo
Instagram - / vashivisuals
IMDb - imdb.com/name/nm0624049/
Facebook - / 411765715598288
LinkedIn - / vashi-nedomansky-ace-8...
RUclips - / vashifilms
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This Guy is Sven, an A.C.E. Award nominee who cut for James Cameron, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and James Franco.
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My absolute favorite Film Editing Book is...
"In the Blink of an Eye" by Walter Murch: amzn.to/20ujg6B
Find out about Walter Murch's theory on the relationship of eye blinking and editing: • In the Blink of an Eye...
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© Copyright 2019 This Guy Edits™
This video was edited by:
Aaron Fitzgerald & This Guy Edits
Follow Aaron on instagram @fitzyfilm.
Stock Footage courtesy of Filmsupply.com
"Jill Bilcock: Dancing the Invisible"-scene courtesy of
Axel Grigor, director and editor - www.imdb.com/title/tt8027180/...
Music courtesy of MusicVine.com:
- musicvine.com/playlist/85209
Thou shall save and keep a backup
This is actually some of the best editing I've seen in an educational video. You turned a phone interview into an engaging, concise lesson. Beautiful demonstration of the topic!
Audio is often so underrated, especially with unexperienced filmmakers. On set and in post. Not only don't people understand the concept of shutting the f up for a minute when recording room tone, but also that it is one of the things that are best when unnoticed.
Quick story to illustrate how big audio can be:
I’ve been a feature film editor for 25 years and I agree completely with these seven rules
After 6 months, I rewatched it 2nd time today just to compare what I learnt in these past 6 months. Thank you, brother, for always spreading knowledge.
I think you searched the comments section looking for these:
11 minutes felt like an hour. So much valuable knowledge. Thank you! I really enjoyed this.
I'm learning how to edit and this motivates me so much every time. For me it's the highest form of creativity because there is no right or wrong. I have a lot of work in front of me but I'll get there :) Thanks for this awesome video!
As an Emmy nominated editor and having spent 50 years in the Network TV trenches..from Ampex quads, CMX, Avid, DaVinci and the Edit Droid etc. This little instructional clip was brilliant and right on the money. Thanks for your input Vashi..I'm sure all the new comers to this important and critical cinematic art form known as "Editing", will find this extremely helpful. So with all that being said...I just had to drop this:
This short clip has actually made me appreciate film again. Haven't really watched films for a couple of years (college eating up all my energy resources), and this has given me a strong desire to dig some of my old favourites out. This has given me an appreciation for what these crews are able to do.
What a beautifully made video this is! The edits, the interview snippets, the films included for illustration's sake--bravo! You are a filmmaker, sir. And I am your newest subscriber.
This is great, Sven! Thanks for making this!
Great video! Always so insightful to hear from the real pro's - tips like that audio x-fade were super useful. That attention detail is such a testament to the editing process - a million tiny acts that create a wonder. Great job, thank you for creating this.
this guy gets it, I abandoned adobe for Davinci years ago and never looked back
I NEED the summary screenshot as a poster and stick it on the wall opposite to my editing office door. So every morning when I walk in, it's the first thing I see. Thank you SOOO much for your time and this valuable video.
This video is awesome. Ive been in a funk with getting the motivation to edit. This really helped me realize how complex editing actually is and its normal to be a little overwhelmed at times.
Vashi has an amazing blog and did several great interviews on podcasts. Definitely worth the deep dive.
Fun Fact: Vashi came to speak at my college about being a video editor and in my opinion. His panel alone was worth the entire price of tuition our family has been paying for the school. He had so much knowledge on the subject and every word he said was one I felt I needed to hear.
Great essay. One can almost derive the "top 5 editor's character traits" :) Love your work. Keep at it!