Showing posts with label independent film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label independent film. Show all posts

Monday, January 6, 2014

Apple updated FCPX, so I figured I should update this blog...

A new year. A new Final Cut Pro. A new machine to pair it with. More editors trying it out and beginning to take it seriously.

And yet... I haven't posted since October!

I underestimated my ability to edit a feature film on deadline while also teaching part-time AND keep up with what I initially imagined was going to be a week-to-week blog. In a single image, I can sum up what kept me away:


I'll clean up this timeline, promise.

Excuses, excuses.

Saturday, October 26, 2013

The decision to go X

For the music documentary I'm editing in FCPX, I was introduced to the director Jesse Lyda by producer Jason Wehling. Jason and I have known each other for a few years now and had worked together on a previous project, but this was the first time I met Jesse. We hit it off and shortly afterward I was hired.

Jesse left the decision for which NLE to cut with up to us, but he did say that he had already bought a copy of X. I don't know how aware he was of the backlash against it at the time, but Jason and I were.

When Jason asked me what I thought of working in X, I lit up. "You're probably the only producer in town right now crazy enough to consider it," I told him.

We had to weigh the pros and cons carefully. I told him about my experience working with FCPX on a short profile I made about one of my film students. This video was something I made on my own specifically to see if I could adjust to X's new ways of working.


Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Editor Jonny Elwyn Does Us All A Solid

Launching a Final Cut Pro X blog while in the midst of editing a feature in Final Cut Pro X is... well... a bit more of a challenge than I thought. That's not true: I knew it would be a challenge and my time to write thoughtful commentary regarding FCPX and our workflow would be tight, but I ventured forth anyway. But boy, has it been tight.

So in between my longer, more project specific posts I will, from time to time, share shorter pieces to give the two or three of you who may have placed this blog in your RSS reader of choice something chew on or explore outside of what I'm bringing to the FCPX table.

To reiterate, this blog was never meant to become a home for tutorials on how to use FCPX technically. I will get into some of that, yes, but if you are new to FCPX and looking for that type of resource, or if you have already dived into FCPX but still need some advice to help you shortcut a technical headache, a good place to start may be London-based editor's recent, aptly titled blog post:



Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Final Cut Pro X: The Bold And The Brave, The... Wait, You're Not Serious Are You?

“Final Cut is dead.”

That said - there is curiosity and skepticism mixed with FCP’s decade-plus worth of history in independent film productions. Hence why I feel it deserves the attention of a blog diary such as this.


That’s all I’ve heard since Apple unveiled a re-imagining of their flagship editing program. Hell, even I said it after I sat down for five minutes looking at version 1.0...er... 10.0.

“This looks like iMovie.”

“What the hell is a magnetic timeline?”

“What do you mean no tracks?”

Two years later, skepticism remains high and rampant. When I attended the Sundance Doc Labs this summer, the wise veterans of the doc world declared over and over that Final Cut was dead and we had better learn Avid if we hadn’t already. (For the record, I have cut on Avid... though not nearly as much as I've cut on Final Cut.)

Final Cut Pro was the first professional NLE I came in contact with. My high school film teacher handed me v.1.2 and said, “Here, learn this.” Neither of us knew what kind of impact it would have on my future or my career.

I edited shorts and eventually features on Final Cut Pro. Over the course of a decade, I came to know it inside and out.

So... though even I had written off Final Cut Pro X (is that a number or a letter?) upon its initial release, I'm also one of the faithful deep inside. I had grown up with this program. It shaped my filmmaking career. Like I said: I’ve worked on Avid. I could (and should and will) learn Adobe Premiere. I still firmly believe each program is just a separate hammer for your creative toolbox.