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Go to Part 1 Robert "Buzz" Knudsons career as a mixer has spanned 25 years and includes such films as, 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit', 'The Color Purple', 'Witness', 'Close Encounters of the Third Kind' and
Leslie Shatz is a freelance sound designer and re-recording mixer, often wearing both hats on the same film. His credits include 'Timecode', 'Good Will Hunting', 'Alien: Resurrection', 'Bram Stokers Dracula', and 'Ghost'. This year he was nominated for an Academy Award for 'The Mummy'. In this continuation of last months conversation with Leslie Shatz, Buzz talks about schedules, eye-ear coordination and drugs and alcohol in the 60s. I think that its safe to say now that the mixing schedules have gotten more intense and more brutal. Yeah. When you figure we took 15 weeks on 'Exorcist' and 'A Star is Born' and all those pictures. Stevens pictures go quicker [Steven Spielberg]. Hed take about six or seven weeks and theyre done. That includes pre-dubbing, and theyre pretty involved pre-dubbs. But he approached the film differently than Friedkin. He sees exactly what he wants in his mind and he doesnt belabor one thing in a busy scene. If it all works, its out the door, you know. Billy [Friedkin] likes to say, "Every effect has to stand on its own." I remember you saying he [Friedkin] would go stand right up next to the speaker and if he heard any hiss Yeah he didnt do that on this new version because they fill everything now, you hear outside sounds when youre inside. Do you think that the mystery is lost, in a way, because everything that moves has a sound attached to it? Oh I hate it. They over-build so much now. Call it whatever you want, but its covering yourself. They want to make sure theyve got the right thing and the right combinations so that once you put them together everybody approves them. Did you ever watch an old movie? Sure. Theres nothing in them. And theyre great. If the guy is walking, if you hear it in the production track you hear it. They didnt have foley in those days. Those pictures were terrific. Theyre classics today. But if you come to the mixing stage today, like that... You cant do that. The director and the producer will throw you out. Throw you out. Im not criticizing, Im really saying theres a difference in the way they approach a movie today. And I think its just been evolving inch by inch to where we are today. I remember when the Rolling Stones did a movie, they came to mix it with you. Hal Ashby. And they said, "We want to mix with Buzz because hell give us the loudest mix of anybody." I dont know where they got that, because boy, Im so anti-loud, but thats the way they mix now. In those days there was the Dolby A analog optical track which had severe limits as to how loud you could get. I think that is the biggest change weve ever had, going from an optical track with no head room at all, to a disc. Now you have all the headroom you want. Getting back to these brutal schedules, I remember back then you didnt like working on Saturday because it got in the way of your golf game. I still play a lot of golf. Do you feel that working in the film industry was a bad trade-off in terms of the lack of leisure time or Well, I dont think so. I think that if you have a good wife, your family and everything works out fine, but if shes not an understanding person it could be nasty. This is my 50th year of marriage. So I think I had a good one. Congratulations. And Ive got a good family, so I think in some cases it might affect the way your family or your life goes. Ive never thought that it affected me personally because I couldnt play golf one weekend or whatever. I think the worst thing about schedules and the long schedules in terms of weekends and so forth are that you make plans and have to cancel them. And we all do it. Im not complaining. Thats just the way this world is. But in the end you feel the trade-off was worthwhile. Oh yeah, sure. Im very comfortable and so you know, I personally cant knock it. Once the union made Saturday a time and a half day, it gave producers a lot more incentive to work the crews on Saturdays. Oh yeah, they used to have to think twice. They had to really want to work it. Right. I remember we used to have to work a half a day on Saturday. Oh really? That was part of the week, years ago. Wed get off around noon. That was back in probably 53. I think mostly it was a six day week, but if there was no work wed get out of there about 12 or 1 oclock. That was part of the contract. When I started out, the mixer was king. As a sound editor, if the mixer wanted to make your life hell, he could do it. Youd be thrown off the job, he could bounce your reel off the stage.
I know the major studios were like that when I first started. Today as you know, that doesnt work. And I think that changed right around the time when I came into the business. Were starting to get away from that and directors seem to be a little more knowledgeable or they care a little more. Some of the directors early on, they didnt know the difference and really didnt care. They knew it was going to get into the theaters so they let somebody else worry about the sound. But today directors want to take it all the way from first day of shooting until it goes in the lab. I remember one time when Jimmy Stewart at Glen-Glenn threw me off the stage and threw my tracks off the stage and they were perfectly fine. I thought I cant I wont survive if Im subject to that. And so I decided I was going to learn how to mix and have more control over my work. Well, he was from the old school, obviously. I worked with him once. He was very pleasant, but he would be capable of doing what youre saying. Thats why theres this trend of sound editors getting on the console, mixing their own stuff. Im much more familiar with my own material and how I cut it than with somebody, like you said, who just sees a set of cue sheets that runs the length of the console. I think thats okay except that theres a little difference between knowing what you put in the tracks and the pressure of having somebody looking over your shoulder telling you how loud to make them. Thats true. Its a little different than just, "I know what this is because I cut it." Theres a certain thing in mixing I call eye-ear coordination. When you have an effect or something, as a mixer, you instantly know your brain works so fast that you know what level to make it. If its a car-by or horn, youve seen it a million times in real life so you instantly know how to make it that level. And if you dont have that faculty I dont think you could ever be a good mixer. Well Ive often compared mixing to being a professional athlete, which is why I think its interesting that you played baseball. Mixers are called upon to have physical reactions, very precise reactions. I think that helps. I think thats why I used to be a pretty good golfer until I got old. I remember going to lunch with the crew from Glen Glenn. We went to lunch at Oblaths [a restaurant, bar and liquor store that was once next to Paramount Studios in Hollywood], sat down and boom, drinks on the table without anyone even ordering them. This is lunchtime, remember, and these were doubles. And the waitress just came back with another round, and I said, "Are you guys going to order food?" and they said " Maybe." Yeah! And now Im older. I think Im about the same age as they were then. I couldnt drink one drink at lunch let alone And have any faculties later in the afternoon. Exactly. And so what happened? It seems like alcohol was a big problem with mixers. Some of those guys had their own seats at Oblaths. One of those guys came over and worked with me. He was a good music mixer, really good. And a nice, really a neat guy. We had a lot of laughs together. But I think he liked to hit it a little bit. Wed pre-dubb in the morning and in the afternoon, wed give him his pre-dubbs from the morning and it was like he hadnt even been there. You never had this encounter with alcohol in that way? No, I dont drink to this day. I never smoke or drink. Im wondering why it doesnt seem to be a problem now. I think its just a trend that people take care of themselves better than they used to. I think people used to drink for a reason in those days. Theyd go after work and sit down and drink until 8 oclock. I didnt do that. I couldnt wait to get home and get my shoes off and have dinner. To see my kids, you know. These guys maybe didnt have that kind of something to go to. I agree with you, the drinking was a big problem in those days. I dont think it had a dime to do with the mixing part of it. I think it was just a part of their personal relationship with their family and for whatever reason they just thought that was the way to go. I wonder whether mixing was more demanding in terms of physical reaction time in those days, and whether that really caused a lot of stress. Now with automation, if you dont get it right the first time you go back. I always said that I got lazy when the "back-up" system came in. [The ability to go back and punch in within a reel, rather than recording it in one continuous 10 minute take.] I used to make great notes on
In the era of the 60s and 70s there was a lot of drug use. How did you deal with it when people would come onto your stage and use drugs? I worked once with a rock and roll guy, I dont remember his name. Anyhow, we did his show in Studio B behind our main theater and they were so drugged out. They were all off the stage and we were wondering, where did they go? They were all laying out in the alley looking at the stars. They were whacked out. And then there was Hal Ashby and Mick Jagger on the Rolling Stone movie. They would come in so fresh in the morning and by 11 or 12 oclock theyd go out a couple of times together and come back, and after that they were just rocking and rolling! They were great guys, though. They were really nice. Hal was one of my favorite people, as a matter of fact. But you didnt see it on the stage. You didnt ever have to tell somebody, "If youre going to do that kind of stuff " No. I wouldnt know marijuana if it was smoking on the stage today. I wouldnt know what it smelled like. My last question is, would you buy a union card for your kids like your dad did for you? I have two daughters and when they were young they both wanted to get in the union, but I didnt let them. Why is that? I think its not conducive to a good marriage and they were all going to get married. I think I made the right move. Ive got great kids, a great family; theyve got good husbands. You cant have a home when you dont have somebody making a home. If it had been a guy it might have been different. Today, unless the kid is very technical he cant make it because pretty soon its going to be out of the hands of just gut feeling, and into a new world of technology. And pictures are going to start sounding like it. The way you had your stage set up with Bob Glass handling the technical part, and you as the man in charge who knows how to deal with the clients, that way is still around today. Maybe that can still happen. Also I think this idea of the eye-ear coordination is always going to be required. Oh yeah, I think the guys will fall out that cant do it. You could be the technocrat of the world or Brainiac or whatever you want to call it but if you dont have the ability to sit there and take the heat and the good times and know what has to be done, it isnt going to work. There might still be the glue, the one guy that can do that and hell carry the rest of them along with him. The one guy that knows right from wrong and lets the technical people do all the work. When he opens the pots up and puts them on 20, if the show has been cut right the tracks will all fit, maybe. In television, if our editors dont prepare their show really well and use their eye-ear coordination in cutting it, when that show comes to the stage they cant mix it in two days. And theres no reason why they cant do features the same way up to a point. I think you can get the general stuff to fall right in and you may have to manipulate some of the car-bys, crosses and stuff, but I think that that could be another part of our industry, where its changing. You think the TV people are going to be teaching the feature people how to do it? You know Ill tell you, the TV editors are on the right track. Im looking forward to this thing with Liberty buying us because I think that they have a big plan, long-term, thats going to make this place just hum. I think they have a game plan technologically-wise and work-wise to where this place is going to be really a fine-tuned unit come a year or two from now. I have high hopes for it. All right. Did I leave anything out? No, I think you did everything. Thanks, Buzz. 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 |