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Q3 2019

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62 CINEMONTAGE / Q3 2019 Writing for the Cut: Shaping Your Script for Cinema by Greg Loftin (Forward by Mick Audsley) Michael Wiese Productions, 2019 Softcover 190 pages $26.95 ISBN # 978-1615933006 by Betsy A. McLane T he back cover of Writing for the Cut: Shaping Your Script for Cinema asks the potential reader, "Will you make the cut?" The copy goes on to declare — in a line sure to appeal to anyone working in post-production — "Editing Is What Makes a Movie." This is not a new idea, but Greg Loftin is the first to write a guide that clearly outlines how a screenwriter, as he sits at the computer, can and should consider what the editor will find when she sits at hers. Loftin identifies himself as a screenwriter and has also worked as a producer and director. Key for readers of CineMontage, he is leader of "The first undergraduate degree program in film editing and post-production in the UK" at Ravensbourne University in London, which focuses on preparing students for careers in creative businesses such as fashion, graphic design and a variety of digital media. He has also conducted master classes with editors, including the late Anne V. Coates, ACE, Eddie Hamilton, ACE, Juliette Welfing and Walter Murch, ACE, CAS. The publisher, Michael Wiese Productions (MWP), has once again offered a concise and useful book that will resonate with both experienced professionals and novices. Its flaws include a dull black-and-white cover and a peppering of tiny, sometimes unreadable frame shots. But that should not deter readers, especially when the MWP website offers the book for $17.54. Editors would do well to make sure that every screenwriter they know gets a copy. Experience in both the inception and the end processes of filmmaking gives Loftin a perspective that reaches deep into screenwriters' constant dilemma of how to get their intended story onto the screen. Since that dream is very seldom realized, Loftin offers tips and tricks that can help writers while quite possibly making work easier for editors. This slim volume is well organized and easy to read. Its 14 chapters include historical basics, such as the Kuleshov Effect and the early use of jump cuts by film pioneer Georges Méliès. Writing for the Cut also pays the appropriate homage to D.W. Griffith and Alfred Hitchcock, the latter singled out for understanding that "the engineers of the perfect suspense machine are editors." A later chapter, "Kinesis," examines the "slicing and dicing of time to put movement into our story — the cut creates motion and the audience adds emotion," while "The Lie Detector" chapter reveals "how editing reveals and fixes flaws." The latter seems especially useful for producers and directors, as well as those screenwriters who may succumb to the belief that story structure can be fixed in post. In the "Puzzle" chapter, Loftin uses a quote from Cecil B. DeMille's longtime editor Anne Bauchens, ACE, quoted in the 1939 book We Make the Movies. Bauchens expands on the often-used analogy of editing as a puzzle: "In a jigsaw puzzle the little pieces are all cut out in the various forms and you try to fit them together to make a picture, while in cutting films you have to cut your pieces first and then put them together." CUT / PRINT A screenwriter walks into an edit suite...

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