It’s a classic filmmaker’s dilemma: What do you do when you’ve got too much of a good thing?
Oscar-winning film editor Pietro Scalia faced this challenge on Robin Hood, director Ridley Scott’s take on
It’s a classic filmmaker’s dilemma: What do you do when you’ve got too much of a good thing?
Oscar-winning film editor Pietro Scalia faced this challenge on Robin Hood, director Ridley Scott’s take on
The first cut of the movie came in at 3 hours, 25 minutes, meaning it needed substantial editing to get it down to a length appropriate for cinematic release.
“That’s scary,” says Scalia in this exclusive clip from the Robin Hood Blu-ray and DVD, out Tuesday. “That’s the pain you get and [everybody involved has] to face that. Then you have to say, ‘OK, how am I going to lose at least an hour?’ And you think about it. You know, you gotta lose a third of the movie.”
Scalia, who won back-to-back Academy Awards for best film editing on Scott’s Gladiator and Black Hawk Down in 2000 and 2001, said the ongoing collaborative process eases the difficult task of hacking a film down to size. Find out more about Scalia and Scott’s work together in the clip above.
One Merry Man (or Woman) who also happens to be a Wired.com reader will win a Blu-ray copy of Robin Hood and a PlayStation3 to watch it on. Five runners-up will win Robin Hood DVDs. To enter, just share your favorite incarnation of Robin Hood, one of pop culture’s most prolific characters. Fire away in the comments section below. Entries must be received by 12:01 a.m. Pacific on Sept. 28, 2010. Winners will be notified by e-mail.
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Authors: Lewis Wallace