Dream Repairman
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3.0 • 1 Rating
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Jim Clark shares his experiences as a highly successful film editor at a time when films were a true collaboration of talented individuals.
The legendary "Doctor" Clark was the man who could make sick films healthy again. The role of editor in the collective, collaborative process that is the making of any film is massively important but not one that is generally recognized outside the small pond that is the filmmaking community. In this wonderfully enjoyable memoir, this point becomes steadily obvious, but it is made with subtlety, discretion, and modesty. The book is also a history of the post-war film industry in England and America as well as an autobiography. As William Boyd wrote in his Introduction, "The trouble with writing an autobiography is that you can't really say what a great guy you are, what fun you are to work with and hang out with, what insight and instinct you have about the art form of cinema, and how much and how many film directors are indebted to you."
Customer Reviews
Okay, but
A book by a film editor.
Film editing is story telling.
Yet, puzzlingly, this book has no ending. It just stops.
No wrap-up, like: I loved the business, I loved all the people I have meet and worked with over the years, etc......some kind of observation, some kind of afterthought. But no,
absolutely nothing. It reads like it stops in mid-thought.
Almost made the read a waste.
Is this the result of carelessness (like the many punctuation errors) or was ending the book this way intentional?
Some editor. Didn’t even bother to make an attempt at closing his own story in some coherent way.