
“Matthew Robbins phoned me and told me that Fred [Zinnenmann] was asking who had edited The Conversation [1974],” stated Walter Murch, referring to the conspiracy thriller which saw him co-nominated for Best Sound at the 1975 Academy Awards. “I was out of work at the time, so I wrote a letter to him saying I’d heard he was making Julia, coincidentally I had just read Pentimento [the fictional memoir the movie is based upon], Lillian Hellman’s book, and I’d love to edit it if he would like to meet. So I flew to New York, in the spring of ’76, and we hit it off. He was shooting Julia in England and France, so for the first time I would be working outside the country on a studio project with people I didn’t know beforehand.”

Concerned about the prow of the camera barge entering into view on a particular shot, Walter Murch approached his director in regards to fixing the image; to his dismay Fred Zinnemann decided to leave the picture unaltered. “That was very characteristic of Fred’s approach,” admitted Murch of the mistake which went unnoticed by preview audiences, “but for the life of me I couldn’t see what advantage there was in having this thing come into frame.” Murch remembers fondly the three-time Academy Award winning moviemaker; their working relationship resulted in him receiving a co-Oscar nomination for Best Editing with Marcel Durham (The Odessa File). “We remained friends after Julia, seeing each other when I was in London or he was in Los Angeles…Although there were parts of him that were mysterious to me, I feel a special kinship with Fred. I do love control. And I do love randomness.”
Heading back to America, Walter Murch was recruited to help out on another revived Zoetrope project to be produced and directed by his good friend Francis Ford Coppola (The Outsiders). “It seems strange now, in hindsight, but the spark of Francis’s desire to do Apocalypse [Now] was an understandable attraction for a big, formulaic action film with bankable stars,” recalled Murch who was a sound designer and one of four film editors on the project. “So Apocalypse rumbled down that unlikely road for about a month until Francis, to his regret but also his credit, must have realized, ‘I can’t pull of this distanced, formulaic type of filmmaking, I have to get intimately involved in it.’” A radical revamp of the production caused Coppola to replace his leading man Harvey Keitel (Bugsy) with Martin Sheen (Badlands); Walter Murch agreed with the casting decision. “Marty has an openness to his face, a depth to his eyes, that allowed the audience to accept him as the lens through which they were able to watch this incredible war. Keitel is perhaps more believable as an assassin, but you tend to watch him rather than watch things through him. And if he doesn’t do anything, it’s a frustrating experience.”

Originally intended to be completed by December 1977, the production troubles of the picture became so legendary they are chronicled in the documentary Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse (1991). “I had the responsibility from the beginning of the film till the end of the sampan massacre,” explained Walter Murch, “with the notable exceptions of the whole helicopter/Valkyries attack, which was being edited by Jerry Greenberg (The French Connection), and the Playboy concert, which was edited by Lisa Fruchtmann (The Right Stuff). Richie Marks (Broadcast News), who was the supervising editor, had responsibility for everything after the sampan massacre. Jerry left the film in the spring of 1978, and then I took over I took over the helicopter sequence. I worked on that and everything else in the first half of the film for another six months. All told, I was editing the picture for a year and then working on the sound for another year. Two years – kind of like enlisting in the military!”
Oscar glory awaited Walter Murch as he co-received the Academy Award for Best Sound and was honoured with a co-nomination for Best Editing. At the BAFTAs, Murch was a co-contender for Best Sound and Best Editing, while the American Cinema Editors co-nominated him for Best Edited Feature Film.
“I’ve always collaborated on what I’ve written,” said Walter Murch. “THX [1970] with George Lucas [American Graffiti], and then the original Black Stallion [1979] screenplay with Carroll Ballard [Harvest] and Gill Dennis [Walk the Line]. Outside of helping to adapt the renowned children’s story about a boy and his horse by Walter Farrey, Murch re-recorded the sound for the fantasy tale Dragonslayer (1981) which features British acting legend Ralph Richardson (The Heiress).

Sent away to a mental institution by her aunt and uncle, Dorothy (Fairuza Balk) is saved by a natural disaster that transports her back to the magical land of Oz. To develop his sole directorial effort Return to Oz (1985), Murch combined his love for the cult publication Wisconsin Death Trip (a collage of photographs and newspaper stories from 1890 Wisconsin) and his childhood fascination with the Oz series of books by L. Frank Baum. “There is a beautiful picture I have from Wisconsin Death Trip of a girl standing by a river, with her back to us. I always thought of her as the real Dorothy,” remarked Murch who also sought to examine the profound issues dealt with by Baum, like, “Where is the Self? Can the Self survive the dismemberment of the body?”. The dark philosophical undertone of the story backfired for Murch as audiences found the film to be disturbing. “Because Return to Oz was trying to explore these same issues head on, without the relief of songs and the more openly artificial, vaudevillian approach of the 1939 Wizard, I think it suffered at the box office. I was tapping into the same kind of opposition Baum himself encountered.”
Magazine film critic Richard Schickel of Time wrote, “Any movie in which the Midwestern prairie looks more attractive and more interesting than the enchanted land over the rainbow is in big trouble.” Schickel’s colleague at the Chicago Reader, Dave Kehr, was more conciliatory with his review, “In the vein of such underground classics as Invaders of Mars [1953] and The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T [1953], it’s bleak, creepy, and occasionally terrifying.” Walter Murch found his experience behind the camera to be enlightening. “I learned something during the process, which is that I’m not temperamentally interested in directing for the sake of directing,” confessed Murch. “It’s a completely unnaturally state of being, for me anyway. The closest is probably what a general goes through in organizing troops in the middle of combat. You as a writer and I as an editor are allowed, in fact obligated, to sometimes step away. It’s not an indulgence, it’s an absolute necessity. But a director cannot step away.”
Teaming up with Francis Ford Coppola (Peggy Sue Got Married) and George Lucas again, Walter Murch edited a seventeen minute long 3D science fiction musical Captain Eo (1986) starring Michael Jackson. The short film screened at Disneyland Park from 1986 to 1997 and was re-released in February of 2010 as Captain Eo Tribute after the death of the famous singer.

Other complications arose as the Cold War was still alive and well in 1986, which made shooting on-location in Prague impossible. To address the problem, over forty hours worth of film, in various formats, capturing the Soviet invasion were collected from around the world. “I particularly like the invasion scene in Unbearable Lightness of Being – what we were able to achieve by integrating all kinds of documentary footage from 1968 with the new material shot with our actors, Daniel Day-Lewis [My Left Foot] and Juliette Binoche [Chocolat],” stated Walter Murch who had a major creative challenge in assembling the dramatic sequence. “How do you reduce the key moment in a nation’s history, for which you have so many hours of material, into fifteen minutes? It was a question of time, simply spending time with the material and selecting striking images. Not just visually striking, but striking in all the senses. Then finding ways to put those images together so they enhance one another, both by resonance and by contradiction.”
A technique Walter Murch has continued to use since working on the project involves taking and labeling printed representative stills (two to five) from each camera position for a designated sequence and placing them on their own separate foamcore board. “There may be several “iconic” frames within each shot. Essentially I am trying to answer the question, ‘Why did the director shoot this shot?” explained Murch. “As I’m assembling the film, I’ll be trying to find the exact moment each shot reaches its optical maturity. I want to hold each and every shot on screen long enough for it to deliver the goods, but cut it off at a moment when it also has the potential to lead to somewhere else.”
Returning to the genre of science fiction, Walter Murch cut together the twenty-nine minute long Call from Space (1989) which included Hollywood stars Charlton Heston (Ben-Hur) and James Coburn (The Magnificent Seven) as well as Bill Campbell (The Rocketeer).
“In the middle of a fight scene, you want to abuse the audience’s expectations,” instructed Walter Murch. “You want to send their eye off in one direction, then cut with something going in completely in the opposite direction. That induces in the audience the sense of visual disorientation you get when you’re really physically fighting with somebody.” Then there is the matter of portraying deeply-felt human emotions which Murch effectively accomplished when assembling a famous cinematic moment. “In a passionate love scene there’s actually an advantage to be gained by crossing the stage line as many times as possible. If you look at the dance scene in Ghost [1990], after Sam [Patrick Swayze] and Molly [Demi Moore] have been playing with clay and start to dance to the music on the jukebox…that’s full of cuts that cross the stage line. Each cut, once the dancing gets passionate, puts the characters on the “wrong” side of the frame. Visually, I’m taking care of the eye, it’s rhythmically and sensuously done but – wait a moment! Isn’t she supposed to be on the left and he’s supposed to be on the right?...What that does is put you in the state of mind of making passionate love to somebody – disorientation, spacelessness…By fracturing the grammar of film in that way, you induce in the audience a little of the same mentality.”

Subsequently, assembling the three pictures into one major opus titled The Godfather Trilogy: 1901 to 1980, Walter commented, “I prefer them as separate films myself, though there are many who prefer the story in chronological order.”
Next on the agenda for sound designer and film editor Walter Murch were a series of Hollywood movies – House of Cards (1993), Romeo is Bleeding (1994), I Love Trouble (1994), and First Knight (1995) as well as a documentary on the life of an infamous cartoonist called Crumb (1994).
Approached by British filmmaker Anthony Minghella (Truly Madly Deeply), Murch found himself entering into a creative partnership that rivaled the one he had established with Francis Ford Coppola.
Continue to part three.
For more on Walter Murch, be sure to visit FilmSound.org and NPR, while Michael Ondaatje's The Conversations: Walter Murch and the Art of Editing Film
You can also show your appreciation and discuss his body of work on the Walter Murch Facebook page.
Walter Murch lecture - part one and part two.
Short Film Showcase - Captain EO (1986)
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
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