Mike Barber
August 13th, 2008, 09:32 PM
Seriously, I can't believe that I am at a point where I am very seriously considering the request, nay demand that I not be credited for the editing of a project. I would bolt from the project so fast that I would break the sound barrier if it wasn't for my loathing towards not finishing a project. I'm the kind of guy that will stick to something, even under incredible duress, and put in whatever it takes to get a project done… but even I have limits.
Many of you have met this guy before -- the young director that makes up for his lack of experience with a staggering amount of hubris. I know when we start out we all believe we're the next Kubrick… but damn it, he just can't stop directing!
I was hired to be a contributing creative mind for this nano-budget short, however I find that my input is a waste of effort. The director is firmly bent on having it cut the way he wants it cut -- random wide shots, sloppy timing, pace-robbing sequences and all -- despite his overtures of how filmmaking is a collaborative process (which he says like he read it in a book). At this point, I feel I am nothing more than a hired button pusher.
He's making very questionable demands when it comes to the cutting… and they are just bad. My effort on the first couple of rough cuts is quickly being reduced to something that can only be described as amateur.
I know it's his baby; he wrote and directed the thing, so I suppose he's entitled to make his movie as trite and crappy as he wants, but I don't want someone to see my name on it and take it as a representation of the quality of my work.
Many of you have met this guy before -- the young director that makes up for his lack of experience with a staggering amount of hubris. I know when we start out we all believe we're the next Kubrick… but damn it, he just can't stop directing!
I was hired to be a contributing creative mind for this nano-budget short, however I find that my input is a waste of effort. The director is firmly bent on having it cut the way he wants it cut -- random wide shots, sloppy timing, pace-robbing sequences and all -- despite his overtures of how filmmaking is a collaborative process (which he says like he read it in a book). At this point, I feel I am nothing more than a hired button pusher.
He's making very questionable demands when it comes to the cutting… and they are just bad. My effort on the first couple of rough cuts is quickly being reduced to something that can only be described as amateur.
I know it's his baby; he wrote and directed the thing, so I suppose he's entitled to make his movie as trite and crappy as he wants, but I don't want someone to see my name on it and take it as a representation of the quality of my work.