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by Lisa
Willinger Dan Hanley and Mike Hill have worked together for years, cutting all of Ron Howards pictures together, including 'Backdraft', 'Far and Away', 'Apollo 13 '(for which they won an Academy Award), 'Ransom' and 'EdTV'. The two are currently working on 'How the Grinch Stole Christmas'. They met as apprentices at Paramount where Hanley worked with editor Robert Kern on 'Laverne and Shirley'. Kern was very supportive and encouraged him to cut. That led to a job assisting on an MOW that Ron Howard directed, and this led to 'Night Shift', Howards first feature. The show had a very tight schedule, so Howard wanted two editors. As Hanley recalled, the studio wasnt keen on the idea of these two young editors, whod assisted on sitcoms and an MOW, being given so much responsibility, but the director fought for them. (Characteristic of Howards kindness, he didnt tell them this until years later.) At the chat, the two demonstrated a remarkable partnership and lack of personal ego, describing their process with humor and modesty. "If theres a scene that you think is fun you might grab it and say, Hey the next really great scene that comes along, you grab that one," said Hill. "The really difficult scenes you divvy up." Sometimes one will cut a scene and then the other will make a 2nd pass on it. At other times they split a scene in half and share it. On a scene involving 60 daily rolls, cut on film, Hill recalled, "I would hand Dan pieces of film and we would make decisions together. Sometimes we pass a scene back and forth so many times were not sure who cut it." They acknowledged how lucky they are to work with Ron Howard, who they characterized as a wonderfully nice "workaholic." The duo delivers their first cut 4-5 days after wrap. This means keeping up to camera no small feat on projects that typically print 700,000 feet of film. "I admire some of these guys [working alone] on these big pictures," Hanley admitted, "were putting in some pretty good days, and Im thinking, how the heck do they get through all that film on their own? Im amazed by it." While they acknowledge the mentoring that enabled them to attain their positions, they do not consider themselves ideal mentors. They clearly appreciate their assistants, but because they have each other, they dont think their setup is the greatest for an assistant looking to move up. And while they encourage the assistants to play with the material, there is rarely enough time to do it. They strive for a cutting room in which people police themselves, and a remarkable lack of hierarchy prevails. Theres no first assistant and assistants trade duties. "We want them to work with each other and not always dump the lousy work on each other," asserted Hanley. "Everyones fair about it." The team characterized 'Apollo 13' as one of the harder shows theyve cut the control room and space material was shot a month apart and material from 2nd and 3rd units dribbled in constantly. The material shot in the air, in zero gravity, had no slates and unusable sound, which kept the assistants busy organizing it and syncing it by eye. The pair showed a scene from 'Far and Away' in which Mike Hill played a small part. He demonstrated his acting ability by getting beat up by Tom Cruise. They also screened a terrific sequence from 'Ransom' in which Mel Gibsons character refuses to accede to the criminals demands, and the criminals make it seem as if theyve killed his son. The intercutting between the criminals and Gibsons character built the tension beautifully and led to a powerful climax. "On 'Ransom' Howard wanted to experiment with camera moves so he shot the rehearsals on video in various ways," Hanley recalled. The editors cut Gary Sineses side of the scene first on video, and Howard then shot Gibsons side based on that. "It was a collaboration between production and editing on the way that material was shot," Hill added. An informative and entertaining evening, this Fireside Chat offered an inspirational model for collaboration, as well as an interesting alternative to the traditional hierarchy of the cutting room. Lisa Willinger is an Assistant Editor. She recently finished work on 'Party of Five'. and Stan Cassio and New Edit for the refreshments and RSVP line. Reprinted from The Motion Picture Editors Guild Magazine Vol. 21, No. 3 - MayJune 2000 Guild Home | Magazine Home | Top of Page Copyright © 2000, All Rights Reserved by The Motion Picture Editors Guild, IATSE Local 700 |