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Thelma Schoonmaker On Cutting The Irishman

“You trim things down and shape the scene so it gets a rhythm and a flow. When do you cut to a close-up? When do you use a two-shot? There’s a long period of refining and shaping like the film is a piece of clay. That’s why editing is such a great job. You’re handed this raw material and then you shape it into something else. Usually, you trim things down because you want the scene to move quicker, and yet the pace in The Irishman is different from other movies these days. It is slower, deliberately so. In the scene where Harvey Keitel is chastising Robert De Niro because he was supposed to blow up this laundry, we have long pauses because Bob realizes he’s in deep trouble. Those pauses are very important. Most editors would probably cut that scene quicker, but the pauses are what makes it work.”
Thelma Schoonmaker On Cutting The Irishman

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