Post Magazine

September/October 2019

Issue link: https://digital.copcomm.com/i/1175944

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 18 of 43

DIRECTOR'S CHAIR www.postmagazine.com 17 POST SEPT/OCT 2019 feelings. So that's been a very interesting learning process for me." How early on did you start integrating post and all the VFX? "Right from the very start of pre-produc- tion, and we have a great pipeline with great people. The best tool available to us for a film like this is previs." Did you do a lot of previs? "Yes, quite a bit, at Third Floor, and it's been so helpful as we start with all the previs, then use visualization during the shoot, and then it's post-vis in the computer, in 2D and 3D, and we have a team of over 100 people just doing that, thanks to our budget. So that's the real miracle-worker on this movie, as you can start seeing things with the actors. I love all that." How tough was the shoot? "We shot for 74 days and it was very hard, as always. And we had so much blue-screen and green-screen work, which I don't enjoy that much." Where did you post? "It was all based in London, and we set up editorial offices there and then did all our VFX mainly at MPC, but we also had teams working on it at MPC in Montreal, Vancouver, Bangalore, plus we used some other houses, including Gentle Giant, Trace VFX and Mill Film. And my post production producer, and lifesaver, was Bryan Carroll." Do you like the post process? "I do, a lot. On this we have about 54 weeks of post and we had even more on Pirates, so I don't feel too rushed. I've often wondered what my favorite part of filmmaking is, and I think doing the music and scoring in post is the bit I enjoy the most, along with the actual shoot, as I love being in the trenches and dealing with all the problems of a shoot. And even though I'm there with 1,000 people and all the pressure, it's almost where I have the most freedom, as I'm probably the only one on the set who knows how all the pieces will fit together in post. I think the worst part of post is the first cut — and that has nothing to do with the editors. It's just the nature of the beast, and it can only get better from there." Talk about editing with Laura Jennings and Craig Wood. "They started cutting stuff about two weeks into the shoot, and putting some scenes together. Sometimes I'd look at what they'd done and think about it, and see what I liked and so on. The thing is, I used to be an editor myself, so when I'm shooting I have a very clear vision of what I want. In my whole career I've never had to go back and do a re-shoot because I didn't get it, so I'm pretty confident in that, and yes, I see what the editors are doing and I give them my notes, but for me the real editing process doesn't start until I finish shooting, and then I jump right into it. The funny thing is, on smaller films you have far less time for the edit, and you really have to start the real edit while you're still shoot- ing, just to get through all the material. But on these huge movies, I have the time to really focus on it after the shoot. We've been editing this for 11 months now. It never ends. And I love having two editors. I had two on Pirates, and I love being able to go back and forth between them. We began with Laura doing the first three or four reels and Craig doing the last few, and then we swapped it around so they get to work on each other's work, and I really enjoy that." What were the big editing challenges? "It's always about telling your story clearly, and then on this, balancing all the drama and comedy elements, and finding the right rhythms and pace and tone. And you can't rush editing, and it keeps changing and altering in your mind. You can cut a sequence and really love it, and then a week later you hate it (laughs). It's not an exact science. It's like making wine, and hopefully it keeps getting better over time. My favorite part of editing is the last 10 percent, where you finally feel it's all coming together, and it suddenly lifts and you feel like you're almost there." Talk about the importance of sound and music. "For me, it's half the movie experience, and working on it feels like a bonus for me as a director. I love this part so much, and both my editors are very sound-sav- vy, so we did a fair amount during the edit, but then when you get the real sound designers in, it just opens up the whole film and makes it 10 times bigger, and it helps so much with the comedy. And then when you add the music, it becomes so emotional. We scored it at Abbey Road with a 110-piece orchestra, and as I've played piano since I was six, and my dad had a record store, I am very interested in this whole part of post." Where will you do the DI and how important is it to you? "We'll do it at Company 3 with Stefan Sonnenfeld, and it's hugely important. I'm very involved, along with DP Henry Braham, and Stefan's done my movies before, and getting that seamless look is crucial, along with the palette and mood and bite." Did the film turn out the way you hoped? (Laughs) "No. Some elements did, but other sequences and elements turned out differently, and that's not a bad thing." The film has more than 1,000 VFX shots, and wings play a big part. The film's orchestral score was recorded at Abbey Road.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Post Magazine - September/October 2019