2016-09-01

An Alternative Film School for Editors



What is the best way to create a career in film editing from scratch?

Here is an Alternative 1 year Film School for under $10,000

A step by step film school curriculum: Practice, Theory and Industry preparation.

Should I go to film school? Is film school worth the money? What is the Best Film School for Film Editing?

These are the kind of questions that anyone pondering a career, or a career change, into film editing may well ask themselves.

If the goal of film school is to get you ready for a career as a working professional in the industry, is it still the best way to go about setting yourself up for, and breaking into, film editing?

One shortcut into the industry is available to the lucky few who might personally already know an editor, just ask if you can follow them around for a while and become their indispensable assistant. Hoover up as much knowledge as you can by osmosis and just don’t leave. Who you know is more important than what you know. You can learn the rest on the job.

But, if you’re not in that fortunate situation and you’re thinking of going the more traditional film school route, might there might be a better way? I question whether I would recommend someone go to film school today and if not, what would I suggest instead?

I went to film school and got a BA Hons in Film and TV Production from the University of Westminster here in London. (You can even still see a younger me on the website, time to update things guys!)

I had a great time, learned a lot and met some life-long friends. In fact, as I mention in my ebook on being a creative freelancer, now that I’m 10 years in to a satisfying career as an editor, it all happened in part because I went to film school. I got my very first editing gig because a friend from my course, who just gotten a job at a post house, got me an interview when they were looking for more people. Who you know is really important.

So, for me, Film School was an invaluable start that also connected me to first job that led to my second job and so on…

But if I think about the investment I made; three years and £3,000 of course fees, plus living expenses that came to about £15k in total over three years. Today those same course fees are £27,000 for three years. Is there a better way to leverage that time and money?

So running with that thought experiment, here is my suggestion for an alternative film school for film editors, with a detailed breakdown of what I would do and how I do it. Plus what it would cost.

Download The Alt-Film School



Download Alt-Film School in a spreadsheet

Download this spreadsheet to get the ‘shopping list’ of gear, online courses, films, books and TV shows that make up my Alt-Film School and to see what it’s possible to create for under $9,000/£7,000 and have everything you need to start working as an editor once your training is complete.

Then read through the rest of this page to get my explanation of each part of the curriculum in detail, as well as a few extra resources, promo codes and more ideas along the way. Use these quick links to jump right in, or just scroll down.

Gear Set Up | Practical Curriculum | Film and Editing Theory | Industry Preparedness

A few Caveats

Before we get started first of all it’s important to point out it’s difficult to know if one route really is better than another – we can’t live the same life twice! So there’s no guarantees with this thought experiment. It’s just a potential alternative to film school that might suit some people, or give them an opportunity that they can’t otherwise afford.

Personal Requirements

That brings me to the second point. You have to decide if Film School is for you based on your personality, how you work and whether you’ll more greatly benefit from the structure, guidance, community and creative collaboration it will hopefully surround you with. Or if you are able to motivate yourself, create new connections, take on, run with and complete your own projects and demonstrate some creative and entrepreneurial flair along the way.

Which ever option you choose you’ll need to be disciplined, committed and show up every day looking to learn.

Tom Abrams, associate professor of screenwriting and production, USC School of Cinematic Arts, has this to say about Film School, in this Variety Magazine article debating film school:

“Not everybody that owns a camera and learns how to use Final Cut is going to be a great filmmaker,” he says. “Film school is about ideas, it’s about story. Universities have always been about having a safe place where you are inspired and challenged by your peers. And having that structured way of expressing yourself and critiquing yourself is one of the most important reasons that you go to film school.”

So for this thought experiment to be plausible, it’s important that we find ways to still gain the benefits that film school presents, but outside of the higher learning environment.

Let’s take a look at one possible approach to learning how to edit and become a working editor for less than the cost of film school, and get more out of the time and money in the long run.

Requirements for an Alternative Film School For Editors



First of all it’s important to set the scene of what film school does give you and how we can match or better that. We also need to remind ourselves that to decide to be a student is generally to decide to stop working, pay someone else to learn from them and live a fairly frugal and humble life in the process.

Our Alt-Film School may well require some of those same commitments, depending on your personal circumstances, but as part of ‘besting’ film school, can it be done, part-time, or even gradually over a long period of time, if income and employment are necessary parts of your ‘student’ life?

What Film School Does Give You

Comprehensive and well thought out education.

Practical experience.

Friendships and future industry contacts through your classmates.

You often have to move cities – usually to a place of future work (London, NY, LA or a big city with a creative centre).

You get to try numerous different production roles and discover things you love that you may never have considered.

Watch, study and critique a wide variety of films.

A community of peers and collaborators.

Access to mentors, experienced artists and alumni.

Curriculum Requirements

Most good film schools offer a mix of both film theory and practice. As we’re focusing on film editing it makes the job a little easier, but to round things out a little I’ll try to offer suggestions for a broader film education too.

To me the essential requirements of our Alt Film School are:

PRACTICE:

Learning the nuts and bolts of editing.

Actually editing – as much as possible.

Receiving critical and constructive feedback on that work so you can improve your craft.

Understanding the fundamentals of other roles and disciplines as part of the film making process.

THEORY

Understanding film structure, storytelling and grammar as it relates to editing.

Watching a lot of films from a diverse range of countries, genres, eras and budgets.

Critiquing and understanding film theory essential concepts based on that broad film diet.

EXTRA CURRICULAR

Meeting people

Making industry contacts

Gaining Work Experience

Building a portfolio

Practical preparation for the industry

Financial Comparisons

As a ball-park for what Film School does cost and what our rough budget is I’ll stick to just course fees, and let you sort your living expenses yourself. As I mentioned above, a student life is a massive investment in time and money and often requires not working to engage with it full time.

So what does film school cost?

My degree from the University of Westminster is 3 year degree at £9k a year, so £27k/$35,600.

London Met Film School, 3 year degree course is £15.750 a year, so £47,250/$62,294

London Met Film Six Month Course is £10k/$13,000

University of Southern California (USC) is $52,000/£40,000 a year.

New York Film Academy, 1 year course is $28,000/£21,000.

There are hundreds of film schools across the globe to choose from but this at least gives you a quick sense of the kind of costs involved, and produces a wide spectrum of expense.

Designing an Alternative Film School for Film Editing

Lets see if our Alternative Film School can get create a industry ready editor for £10,000/$13,000 or less, deliver the same breadth of curriculum and achieve it all in a single year.

In these next sections I’ll discuss the equipment you could buy to both learn to edit and set yourself up with as a working editor, the course curriculum and how to achieve it in today’s world, as well as thoughts on what a week in the Alt Film School might actually look like.

Download the Alt Film School spreadsheet to see everything on one page.

Buying equipment for learning and working

The beauty of spending all that tuition fee cash on actual equipment is that you’ll not only have the right gear to learn with, but you’ll also have everything you need to be a working editor too, at least from a hardware and software perspective.

The following list comes to around £4000 and $5000, which will provide pretty much everything you’ll need for a decent home edit suite, the core of which will also double as a portable set up for on-set or client office work.

Having reviewed quite a few bits of gear on the blog over the last few years here’s what I would recommend to get you set up. Click on the item to jump to the review post for more info.

15.4 Apple Mac laptop – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk (The next Macbook Pro is due out ‘very soon’ so don’t buy this yet!)

Intuos Pro Medium Wacom Tablet – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Full Size Apple Keyboard – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Yamaha HS7 Studio Speakers (Pair) – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Beyerdynamic DT770 Pro Headphones – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

LG 31MU97Z-B 4K Computer Monitor – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

G-Raid G-Drive 4TB Thunderbolt External Hard drive – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Scarlett 2i4 Audio Interface – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

OWC Thunderbolt 2 Hub – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Eastpak Floid Laptop Bag – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Griffin Elevator Laptop Stand – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Extras (Cables, adaptors etc.)

TOTAL COST = £4,016 /  $5,222

One cost that I’ve left out of this list is the actual editing software itself. I’ll discuss this in more detail later on in the post, but if you spring for either Avid Media Composer or Adobe Creative Cloud it will be about £550/$600 a year. Less expensive options would be Final Cut Pro X for £229/$299, or DaVinci Resolve which is free!

The Alt-Film School Editing Curriculum

PRACTICE:

Learning the nuts and bolts of editing

Actually editing – as much as possible

Receiving critical and constructive feedback on that work so you can improve your craft.

Understanding the fundamentals of other roles and disciplines as part of the film making process.

The core of this editing film school is Inside The Edit, an exemplary and exceptionally well executed online course in film editing. Costing just £400/$500 for the year this will provide you with a full curriculum of professional editing tutoring as well as 35 hours of documentary footage to edit with.

You can also buy the Pro Drive for £300 more which includes high res version of the footage, production documents and Universal Production Music’s U-Drive with over 2000 tracks to use in your edit.

The FAQ puts it fairly succinctly as to why Inside The Edit is a cut above the rest.

There is no course currently on the market, either in book, web or film school form that teaches this level of detail in the craft of creative editing. Most editing courses available only teach you the technical aspects of editing and if they do dip into the craft of creative editing, it is only at a very basic level. Not only does Inside The Edit teach you how to cut a high end broadcast documentary it is also taught by a highly sought after and respected editor.

GET 10% OFF INSIDE THE EDIT WITH PROMO CODE “JONNYELWYNITE2016”

The best thing about the course is that it’s taught be a highly experienced broadcast TV editor, Paddy Bird who knows both the best working methodologies and the reality of the industry. It’s also incredibly in-depth and will take you many, many weeks to watch the tutorials, let alone work through the actual documentary edit yourself.

Check out the course breakdown here, but an overview of the 14 chapters (each with multiple tutorials) covers the following topics.

Introduction & Fundamentals

Setting up & Organising

Breaking down your footage

Laying down your sync

Painting Pictures: Concepts

Perfecting The Pictures

Pace & Timing

Cutting Actuality

Intercutting

Creating Professional Sync

Hiding Everyday Problems

Scoring concepts

Basic scoring techniques

Advanced scoring techniques

This is a lot more detailed editing tutoring than I ever learned at film school, and delivered by a much more experienced editor. Paddy is an excellent instructor and the course has been meticulously planned, produced and delivered. It’s pretty spectacular and especially for the price!

Check out the example tutorial above to get a taster of the course, and if you like what you see check out my in-depth review here.  This earlier review also features every Inside The Edit tutorial that’s been publicly released and a video chat with Paddy himself.

Edit as much as you can

The second essential ingredient to learning to edit is editing as many projects as you can, and preferably a variety of projects too. That’s where a site like Editstock.com comes in.

For some very reasonable prices you can download all of the rushes (raw footage) and production scripts for a variety of film projects to edit in your own time and in any software you choose. Edit Stocks catalogue is regularly updated and includes commercials, short films, documentaries, music videos and more.

I’ve listed the four packages in the course curriculum which will give you 12 projects to edit, but more are available on the site. EditStock.com founder and professional editor Misha Tenenbaum was kind enough to offer my readers a 15% discount too!

GET 15 % OFF EDIT STOCK.COM WITH PROMO CODE “JONNY”

Another major part of improving as an editor is being able to get constructive and critical feedback on your edit as it evolves. Edit Stock has a $5 feedback service, in which you can upload a cut and get notes on your edit from a professional editor within 48 hours. And you can keep uploading new cuts to get more notes at no extra cost. That’s pretty incredible for $5!

A Free Documentary Editing Masterclass

Highly experienced and multi-award winning Frontline editor Steve Audette shared this two part class on documentary editing some years back. It’s absolutely brilliant and packed with great insights for any editor.

Since then Steve has continued to share his thoughts and expertise online and I’ve gathered the best of all that in the following posts. Take the time to walk through them and absorb all that Steve has to share on the craft of documentary editing.

Tips on Editing Documentaries in Avid Media Composer

A Documentary Editing Masterclass

How to Edit a Documentary

Inside a Professional Edit Suite

Why Constructive Feedback is Essential for Growth

Getting proper feedback on your edits can be a mixed bag online. You can post your videos online and share them on Reddit, Facebook, Twitter etc. to gather a peer review from the general public, but the response you get isn’t like to be that committed or constructive.

A better approach would be to try to line up a few trusted advisors by getting to know some editors online or in person – more on this later – and selectively asking them to watch a cut once in a while. Don’t badger them constantly and don’t expect a quick response, but a lot of editors do want to ‘give something back’ and are happy to help younger editors improve, when they can find the time.

Sharing your video via a ‘client review service’ like Wipster, Frame io or any of the other services listed in this comparison post, so that feedback can be given more efficiently, and with frame-accuracy will make life easier for your editing mentors too.

It would be great if sites like these sought to foster a community of supportive and knowledgable mentors who were willing to watch projects and use the service to feedback on the work. Hopefully we’ll see that in the future.

The Art of Action Editing from Film Editing Pro is another valuable addition to the curriculum and again is affordably priced.

This is a unique opportunity learn how to edit to a professional standard whilst cutting together a lengthy fight scene, filmed by a professional Hollywood crew. The course runs at just over 9 hours of training and is accompanied by 20 GB of HD dailies to cut your own version of the scene with, as well as a collection of nearly 900 sound files – including foley elements, sound effects and trailer hits.

The Art of Action Editing has a nice blend of step-by-step instruction in the form of video tutorials and “homework” assignments in which you have to complete the next stage of the edit in your own time and in your own style. This helps you to not just watch someone else edit and think you’ve absorbed the information or understood the technique but you actually have to do the work to meaningfully progress to the next stage of the course and the next stage of polishing your fight scene.

Learning how to solve problems and without getting stuck or accepting a mediocre cut is what makes the difference between a good editor and a great one. – Chris, Film Editing Pro Trainer

The benefit of learning from another instructor with completely differently course material is that you’ll pick up fresh approaches to the craft of editing and creative techniques from a different arena to the broadcast documentary editing of Inside The Edit. Check out my full review of Film Editing Pro’s course here.

The only tricky part to incorporating The Art of Action Editing into the course curriculum is that it is only open for enrolment at certain times of the year. But given that this Alt Film School is a year long course, you should hit an opening at some point. Sign up to the newsletter to be kept informed and get access to a free 40 minute taster course called Film Editing Mastery.

Learning Editing Software and More

When it comes to learning the software (or pretty much anything on any topic) for the NLE of your choice it’s hard to beat Lynda.com for the sheer magnitude of resources $300 a year puts at your finger tips. This will be your go-to place (other than blogs, YouTube, Google etc.) for comprehensive set by step, push this, click that training.

The more time you spend editing, the more you’ll get to know the ins and outs of the software, but to really get good you need to get fast. That means learning the keyboard shortcuts, learning how to work through your post production tasks in the best way possible, with the software at hand.

This means learning how to do things properly and efficiently. There’s no point learning how to perform a function on a single clip, if you don’t also learn that you can perform that exact same function to all the selected clips in one click too. You’ll waste too much time doing things manually just because you didn’t learn there was a better way and go deep enough with the software.

The Best Training on Lynda.com for Film Editors | The Best After Effects Training for Film Editors on Lynda.com

These previous posts list some of the best courses on lynda.com for film editors from a technical standpoint but the following courses are also well worth watching. I’ll include some other specific titles in the Theory part of the curriculum breakdown too.

Lynda.com also has it’s own Video Editor Learning Path, which includes some of the same tutorials I’ve pulled out.

Avid Media Composer based tutorials on Lynda.com (inc. Essential Training, Narrative Scene Editing and more)

Premiere Pro based tutorials on Lynda.com (inc. Essential Training, Guru training on Compression, Video Dialogue Editing and more)

Video Post Production for Low Budget Films

Short Film Directing (esp. chapters 3 and 8)

If you were taking this Alternative Film School I would probably suggest trying to watch at least one course from Lynda.com a week, to add sufficient breadth to your creative education. Watching courses on financial budgeting, pitching projects, audio mixing and editing, colour correction and other related topics, would be time considerably well spent.

Which NLE should I learn?

The short answer is as many as you can, over time. The practical answer is one and stick with it.

The traditional incumbent system is Avid Media Composer, which will set you back $50 a month. This is what has been the main-stay of broadcast and feature film production for as long as anyone can remember, and doesn’t seem to be going away any time soon.

Adobe Creative Cloud represents much better value for money, and Adobe Premiere Pro is a (I think) easier program to learn. It’s the same price as Avid a month at $50, but instead of a single program you get access to 20+ creative applications including After Effects, Photoshop, Media Encoder, Audition, Illustrator, In Design and many more.

If you choose to you can also use their portfolio website service, premium fonts and 20GB of cloud storage.

Final Cut Pro X is the cheapest of all these three at £230/$300 for a life time purchase, in which (so far) every update has been free and is likely to continue to be. This is gaining ground and represents a complete paradigm shift* in the way editors should think about editing being organised. (*Watch the WTF workflow intro video.)

If money is a real challenge then download DaVinci Resolve. It’s free, it’s very good and as a competitive NLE, it’s getting better all the time.

It’s very hard to say which NLE you ‘should’ learn – Avid is likely to be the dominant system, still, for quite some time to come, and both Inside The Edit and Film Editing Pro are demonstrated in Avid. But when it comes to bang for buck, Adobe’s Creative Cloud is definitely the way to go. Ultimately whichever you learn, you’ll likely feel the most comfortable in going forward.

To be the most ‘freelance ready’ I would say learn Avid Media Composer and Adobe Premiere Pro, at least in my experience. In my course shopping list I’ve put $50/month x 12 for the NLE cost and I’ll leave it up to you. There’s still head room in the budget to include both, but you’ll be doubling up on your learning and it might get confusing.

The Alt-Film School Editing Curriculum Continued

EDIT THEORY

Understanding film structure, storytelling and grammar as it relates to editing

Watching a lot of films from a diverse range of countries, genres, eras and budgets

Critiquing and understanding film editing concepts based on that broad film diet

Watch and watch a lot.

One of the things that so often astounds me when I chat to younger editors is that they so often have not seen many of the ‘classic’ movies that have been produced in the past five or six decades. They may have seen the latest episode of Game of Thrones, but they might not have seen Goodfellas, Apocalypse Now or The Shawshank Redemption.

Watching a lot of different kinds of films was a big part of my youth and my time at film school. It helps to broaden your creative horizons and your understanding of what’s possible in the world of cinema and seeing how it’s evolved over time.

Here are a couple of watch lists to help get you started, with a sneak peak at their top five in each list.

The best edited 75 films of all time as picked by editors of The Motion Picture Editors Guild

Raging Bull (Thelma Schoonmaker, 1980)

Citizen Kane (Robert Wise, 1941)

Apocalypse Now (Lisa Fruchtman, Gerald B. Greenberg, Walter Murch, 1979)

All That Jazz (Alan Heim, 1979)

Bonnie And Clyde (Dede Allen, 1967)

Martin Scorcese’s Film School – 85 Films You Need To See (Alphabetical order)

Interviewing Martin Scorsese is like taking a master class in film. Fast Company’s four-hour interview with the director for the December-January cover story was ostensibly about his career, and how he had been able to stay so creative through years of battling studios. But theHugo director punctuated everything he said with references to movies: 85 of them, in fact, all listed below.

Ace in the Hole

M*A*S*H

Stagecoach

The Third Man

One, Two, Three

IMDB has a top 250 films based on user reviews

The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

The Godfather (1972)

The Godfather: Part II (1974)

The Dark Knight (2008)

Schindler’s List (1993)

Empire Magazine’s Top 100 Films of World Cinema (START HERE!)

Seven Samurai

Amelie

Battleship Potemkin

Bicycle Thieves

Pan’s Labyrinth

Rotten Tomatoes Top 100 Documentary Movies

Man on Wire (2008)

Life Itself (2014)

The Last Waltz (1978)

20 Feet From Stardom (2013)

Taxi to the Dark Side (2007)

Lists like these ones tend to have a tremendous focus on Hollywood feature films for the most part, which misses out on much of the great television and documentary production, so try to watch some films at random from all of the lists. Especially any lists of world cinema and documentaries. Google will have further suggestions!

TV series well worth watching (from my perspective) would also include The West Wing, Sopranos,  Band of Brothers, Breaking Bad, The Office (UK Original) and many more besides. Just watch as much as you can!

In the future it will be interesting to see how the continued rise of original content from Amazon and Netflix shape the tastes and viewing habits of present day, and future, editors. As a last point I would also suggest trying to regularly dip into Vimeo.com staff picks for even more filmmaking variety and creativity.

Also watch film theory video essays online, like the one at the top of this section from Every Frame a Painting’s Tony Zhou, or this one (above) from The Royal Ocean Film Society on David Lean’s use of scene transitions. Then go watch some of the film’s they reference.

The reason to watch video essays like these, other than to learn from them, is to observe how they critique and dissect a film and what it’s doing. This will help turn all that film watching into film learning if you apply the same techniques to what you are watching.

I’ve rounded up the best of Every Frame a Painting in this previous post (along with some other goodies) and more Filmmaking Video Essays in this post.

Film Editing Required Reading List

Read and Read a lot.

I’ve reviewed dozens and dozens of books on the blog over the years (check out the full list here) but here are a handful that would prove useful or could be considered as part of a  required reading* list on the art and craft of film editing.

As with watching a lot of films, reading about the process, craft and mechanics of filmmaking and film editing is a vital component of Film School life.

Editing

Grammar of the Edit, Christopher Bowen – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Film Craft Editing, Justin Chang – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Modern Post, Scott Arundale – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

*Avid Uncut, Steve Hullfish – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

*Behind the Scene, Editing Cold Mountain on FCP7, Charles Koppleman – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

*In The Blink of an Eye, Walter Murch – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Colour Correction Handbook, Alexis Van Hurkman – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Storytelling

*Into the Woods, John Yorke – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

*On Writing, Steven King – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

The Visual Story, Bruce Block – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Business

Making Ideas Happen, Scott Belsky – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

*How to Win Friends and Influence People, Dale Carnagie – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

*Getting to Yes, Roger Fisher and William Ury – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Creativity Inc., Ed Catmull with Amy Wallace – Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

The other essential and definitely required reading would be every single Art of The Cut interview from editor Steve Hullfish. Steve has interviewed dozen’s of the industries best editors and assistants working today and the articles are chock full of insights on the art of crafting a film, building a reliable workflow and much much more. Read them all!

The Art of The Cut on Pro Video Coalition

Twain Richardson’s Frame of Reference is also a fantastic resource to learn from editors at all stages of their careers and with a diverse range of careers, and is another extensive library of interviews with editors.

Lynda.com Film Theory Courses

The History of Film and Video Editing (2 hrs 10)

The Art of Editing with Norman Hollyn (3 hrs 47)

Taking some time to learn where editing has come from and some of the classic editing concepts will provide a huge boost to your understanding of and ability to create polished edits.

Aaron Sorkin Screenwriting Masterclass

The edit is often called the ‘final re-write’ and the parallels between writing and editing are numerous. Here is how I kicked off my review of this excellent course on screenwriting and storytelling that is well worth any editor watching.

It’s a very rare thing to be able to describe something as a masterclass without any hint of hyperbole. But in Aaron Sorkin Teaches Screenwriting from Masterclass.com that is exactly what you have.

A seasoned artist at the top of their game, sharing their hard won expertise and insight directly down the lens straight to your brain.

We’re going to talk about Intention and Obstacle. Which is the most important thing in drama, without that you’re screwed blue. Without strong clear intention and a formidable obstacle you don’t have drama.

Creating compelling engaging narratives, whether through documentary or fiction is the editor’s main responsibility. A course like this will provide you with an excellent foundation in story structure and construction. Check out my full review here.

Preparing to enter the Film Industry

EXTRA CURRICULAR

Making industry contacts

Gaining work experience

Building a portfolio

Practical preparation for the industry

No Film School would be complete without at least an attempt at preparing you to enter the industry. After all, what good is investing a year of your life (or more!) and thousands of pounds/dollars if you don’t then make it into the industry in some form or other.

The key ingredients for getting a job would obviously be – finding someone to hire you, demonstrating you have the required skills and having the business savvy to manage your affairs such that you can stay in the game over the long haul.

All of the editing courses and resources I’ve listed allow you to use your final cuts in your portfolio, which means that not only are you learning how to edit but you are also building a reel of work that shows you know how to edit.

That said, there’s a big difference between editing by yourself, at your own pace at home and sitting in an expensive edit suite with a client watching over your shoulder and the clock ticking. But the only way to learn to swim is to get in the water!

So, how do you meet editors and post-houses to learn from and work for?

First of all you need to be where the work is.

One good thing about film school is that if often forces you to move cities and re-locate to where the epicentres of the industry are located too. Once I arrived in London as a student, I never left because I felt that if I went back home and later tried to ‘re-enter’ the city, it would be harder than if I simply stuck it out. Put yourself in the place of opportunity.

So in our Alt-Film School, once you feel your skills and reel are up to a sufficient standard, think seriously about the level of industry around you and whether there’s enough opportunity to help you get a foot in the door. If not, maybe it’s time to consider moving to where the action is. This is obviously expensive and life changing so do your homework about local opportunities first.

Given that the Alt-Film School has saved you so much money over traditional film school, hopefully this will also allow you some leeway when it comes to gain work experience by working for free, or very little.

To me the trade off between a short period of free work and a new connection, credit or potential job offer is well worth it. But I would caution against working for any post-houses that have a revolving door of ‘interns’ who are essentially free labour. If you suspect this is the case, get out as soon as you can and try else where.

If you decide to get a job as a runner and work your way up, then be sure you pick the right ladder (or post-house) so that all those hours of staying late to be a team player and help out result in promotions and opportunities. You can’t take that stored up good will with you, if  you move companies.

Making Industry Contacts

So how do you go about making those initial industry contacts? Two ways – online and in person. Hopefully one leading to the other.

Everyone’s path in is different and different strokes work for different boats. When I interviewed second assistant editor Rob Sealey (now working on Star Wars: Rogue One!) he shared his method of breaking into the industry.

What was your strategy to get into the film industry?

When getting started I began looking for jobs as a runner in a post production house as I knew that editing and post production was what I was most interested in. Once I was into a postproduction house I met assistants from a TV background who had worked in features. From their experience they suggested that I go on IMDB pro and em

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