There is a spotting session – normally with the editor and director somewhere near the final cut which involves understanding the intentions of the material. Any narrative information that the sound can bring to the final process and the setting. There is generally a lot of discussion about dialogue – quality and intelligibility and whether to ADR or not. Some directors prefer original performance. So, capturing the dialogue places a lot of pressure on the production sound mixer. For me, what we do in sound is generally a collaborative process and as technicians we all try to get the best from the material.
Tag: kami asgar sound editor
Read interviews from the top film crew members working in Hollywood today.
Read interviews from the top film crew members working in Hollywood today.
Interviews from Matthew Toffolo from WILDsound