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Making Waves: The Art of Cinematic Sound (2019)
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(Faint music) (Walter Murch) Before we were born, you're looking at darkness. Sound is the first sense that gets plugged in. Six months, seven months into the womb. It's hearing the mother's heartbeat. It's hearing her breathing. It's hearing Dad shouting from the garage... (Indistinct) (Dog barking) It's making sense of the world. (Indistinct chatter) You have emerged into a kind of consciousness using only sound. And then you're born. (Birds chirping) Sound affects us in a deeper way almost than image does. It goes deeper. (Faint clicking) (Crowd cheering) (Galloping horses' hooves) Oh. (Gunshots) And yet, we're naturally, seemingly oblivious to that. (Ben Burtt) Film sound is an illusionary art, as if you're just hearing the natural sounds... (Spacecraft engines roar) ...happening in the world on screen. (Dinosaur roaring) (Gary Rydstrom) It's subliminal and a purely emotional way of thinking about a movie. (Dinosaur roaring) (Panting) (Glass breaks) (Pat Jackson) It's stealthy, sound work. It's flying under the radar. It's understated. (Various sound effects) But what sound adds to the picture is so exhilarating that I just was hooked, and pretty much never looked back. You're depressed, it's not working, then the sound design comes in... The feeling of scale that the sound was giving... And I think that sound, in many ways is more tied to imagination. (Spears clanging) (Grunting) If you're born to be artistic, sound is going to be part of the deal. It's part of being human. Movie is sight and sound. You only express it with sight and sound. (Tiger roaring) People always talk about the look of a film. They don't talk so much about the sound of a film. But it's equally important, sometimes more important. I am not an animal. The point is to convey an emotion. (Men shouting) Everything is in service of that. (Shooting) And sound is half of the experience. (Uplifting music) I've always been of the belief that our ears lead our eyes to where the story lives. (Rapid gunfire) (Bomb explodes) (Gary Rydstrom) When designing sound on a film today, like "Saving Private Ryan", you're bringing together a rich complex orchestration of sounds. On every film I've worked on with Steven Spielberg, he gives a gift of here's a scene, here's a moment, and I'm counting on sound to help tell the story. Here you go. (Gunshots) What strikes me most about, especially the opening of "Private Ryan", is that it was designed to use sound to tell a part of the story it's not showing you. (Gunshots) So a scene like that fully takes advantage of how a soldier takes in war, which is a pretty narrow point of view. - (Gunshots) - (Bomb explodes) Move. Move. Sound got to handle the scale of it. We spent a lot of time on that first 25 minutes. It was weeks and weeks of just balancing all the sound effects that Gary and his crew provided. (Gunshots) I kind of came up with a certain pattern or rhythm of cutting these machine guns for the background battle. (Gunshots) So that there was some form to this battle. (Gunshots) There's always a rhythm. Even to chaos, there's a rhythm. - (Gunshots) - (Bomb explodes) Point of view is great for sound because it allows you to go inside the head. (Steven Spielberg) So I designed a sequence, where when an explosion hits near Captain Miller, all the sound goes out. That came from an actual veteran that told me that was how it affected him. So it put you deep inside his experience. (Explosion) (Gary Rydstrom) If you look at it, it never has, until the battle is over, a wide shot, that gives you a grand scale "Longest Day" style of D-Day. It doesn't do it. It's all very intimate. (Heavy breathing) And very importantly, there's no score. John Williams would've done a beautiful score with a whole different feeling, but without score it tells you this is real. (Gentle dramatic music) When the score comes in, the score is often used... I think of it as like a life raft. You have an emotional moment and the score comes in. It just gives you something to hold onto. (Dramatic music) (Gary Rydstrom) These different elements of sound in movies - music, sound effects and voice, are similar to the instrument groupings of an orchestra. But film sound work wasn't always like that. (Gunshots) You know, with dozens of sound editors editing thousands of tracks. (Lightsabre swishing) It ultimately took people like Ben Burtt on "Star Wars" and Walter Murch on "Apocalypse Now", to get us to the full immersive soundtrack that the audience has come to expect in movies today... ...created by a team of sound artists, a circle of talent. (Distant) No! But when it all started, movies were silent. Mary had a little lamb Its fleece was white as snow And everywhere that Mary went The lamb was sure to go (Gary Rydstrom) The invention of the phonograph was a monumental step for humanity. We could now capture sound forever. (Ben Burtt) Edison originally developed the motion picture camera because he wanted images to go along with his phonograph. (Muffled speech) So the audio came first. But picture works at one speed. Sound is at another. (Music) They had no way to put it in sync, which is why the whole project was abandoned. They were just so eager to put sound to movies because everybody knew this would elevate the experience. (Orchestral music) Films were projected with a full live orchestra. They could be projected with people talking behind the screen. (Bell rings) There were actually people that travelled around doing sound effects live to silent films. There's films like "Wings" when it played in New York, and its big premieres, it had performers on stage doing live sound effects for airplane engines, and using percussion instruments for the boom of artillery and explosions. They could do wind, galloping horse hooves... - (Galloping horses' hooves) - (Gunshots) There just wasn't technically a way of capturing and recording the sounds, and attaching them to the movies yet. Until 1926. Warner Bros. did "Don Juan" with John Barrymore. (Music) It actually had a synchronised music track, which was mechanically connected to a projector. Then in 1927, they actually recorded dialogue on the set, and so "The Jazz Singer" had spoken portions of it. Toot, toot, Tootsie, goodbye Toot, toot, Tootsie, don't cry (Newscaster) Warner Bros. Theater in New York City, where "The Jazz Singer" is now playing, is sold out for many weeks in advance. What struck people most was Al Jolson's speaking voice, not his singing voice. (Gary Rydstrom) That he spoke was revolutionary to audiences. That's what they wanted to hear. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. You ain't heard nothing yet. Wait, I tell you. You ain't heard nothing. - (Applause) - (Orchestral music) (Ben Burtt) It was a gigantic sensation, so Hollywood was faced with what to do now. They had developed a way of shooting movies without sound, and that involved certain freedom on a set to be in a noisy place because it didn't matter. Suddenly, there was this revolution when they had to start entombing the productions in sound stages, so all sound was blocked out from the outside world. All right. Here we go. Quiet. - Quiet. - Quiet. Roll 'em. (Gary Rydstrom) But the microphone's ranges were so short, the actors couldn't even move. (Inaudible) She's got to talk into the mic. I can't pick it up. Don't you remember, I told you, there's a microphone right there, in the bush. (Gary Rydstrom) It was very limiting. (Speech drops in and out) Cut. (Gary Rydstrom) But despite the limitations, audiences loved sound. And I think it's because even in the sound of a human voice, we carry emotion. Antonio? Nein, nein, nein! It's alive! (Thunder) (Gary Rydstrom) But the addition of the voice was not the only thing that changed in movies at that time. Filmmakers began to realise that sound effects were also an important part of cinema. (Bomb explodes) (Ben Burtt) They discovered that you don't get all the sound effects you want by just hanging a microphone out over the set. The sounds aren't there. So this is where slowly the idea of the sound editor evolved - to add sounds after the fact. (Greg Hedgepath) There's fire, explosions, barnyard animals. Cars and... Motorcycles. Different from buses, different from trains. With a bit of wind in the background and this rain... (Wind howling) (Walter Murch) As sound editors, we create a sound world independent of what got recorded at the time of shooting. (Clattering) (Door creaks) (Bats screeching) (Ben Burtt) But it isn't probably till you get to "King Kong", that you could actually call it sound design. (King Kong and T-Rex roaring) (Ben Burtt) Many techniques we use to manipulate sound today were pioneered on that film. The bulk of it is all about characters that don't exist so Murray Spivack had to get creative to find the right sound. I went to the Selig Zoo at the time. I got all the roars I needed. I then slowed those down to half speed, and I played the tiger growl backwards against the lion roar forward. And it gave me a sort of an uncanny roar. (King Kong and T-Rex roaring) (Ben Burtt) These sound design tricks are still used today. And that was a big step forward. But Murray Spivack operated outside the system. He was locked away in the music department, and no one knew what he was doing. I think they felt the studio would say, "Don't bother with all that," if they knew the kind of effort he was putting into it... (King Kong and T-Rex roaring) ...because the studios had their own collections and their own stock sound effects. They would repeat them. They wouldn't change them over the years. Each studio had its own ricochet... ...and face punch and explosion. If they worked successfully, they'd be kept and used over and over again. (Gunshots) Ow. They were just expected to get something in there and on budget. (Gary Rydstrom) But some of the biggest innovations in film sound actually had their roots in radio. Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men. "The Shadow"or"The Whistler"- any of those shows were fun to listen to. The sound brought it to life. (Gunshot) Doors opening and closing, and footsteps. - (Chuckles) - (Door opens) (Man) Come in. We'll go in the kitchen. (Woman) It's not Marlo playing chef again. What is it this time? (Door closes) (Pat Jackson) I remember lying on the floor in front of the radio console. I thought, "When I grow up, I'm gonna make footsteps like that." Your imagination could dramatise what you were hearing. I just thought it was really great. It was great for your imagination, great for your creative spirit, and so forth. (Walter Murch) An innovator here was Orson Welles. He was very adventuresome in sound perspective. (Bell rings) Now the smoke's crossing 6th Avenue, 5th Avenue... A hundred yards away... (Quiet music) (Walter Murch) So when he did "Citizen Kane", he brought those techniques in sound from radio to film. Rosebud. (Door opens) By being as aggressive spatially with sound as he was with his depth of focus on camera. Charlie, what time is it? 11:30. In New York? Hm? (Walter Murch) This idea that every space has its own signature. The sound energises the environment. Now in complete control of the government of this state. And you can use even very refined elements of reverberation to help you tell your story. (Gary Rydstrom) But this was a new innovation for sound in film. The norm from the 1930s to the 1960s was to emphasise music over sound effects. Why don't you say it, you coward? You're afraid to marry me. You'd rather live with that silly little fool who can't open her mouth except say, "Yes", "No" and raise a passel of mealy-mouthed brats just like her! You mustn't say things like that about Melanie. Who are you to tell me I mustn't?! (Walter Murch) But if you run music all the time in the film, it has a cumulatively counterproductive effect. Constantly injecting steroids. (Dramatic orchestral music) But if you want unrelieved tension, don't use any music at all. (Elisabeth Weis) Hitchcock got the power of sound. He actually essentially dictated a sound script. And he really incorporated the use of the sound into the concept of the film. (Quiet gasp) - (Birds wings fluttering) - (Shrieks) (Groans) (Karen Baker Landers) Hearing their breaths and feeling the impacts and the hits, they kept you very connected right with the characters. That was a scene where it worked really well, just having effects on their own. (Horses' hooves clattering) (George Lucas) David Lean focused on sound. Stanley Kubrick focused on sound. (Eerie music) But the studios weren't encouraging of that kind of thing. (Gary Rydstrom) The Hollywood studio system often had a built-in approach to film sound that was controlled and traditional... - (Galloping horses' hooves) - (Cheers and applause) ...parallel to filmmakers making the same kind of movies over and over again. Pillow talk Girls, girls, girls, girls Beach Blanket Bingo, that's the name of the game It was looked upon as like a factory. (Walter Murch) And that tends to restrict the adventuresomeness, especially in a studio environment. So the Hollywood films I'd seen as a kid growing up didn't make me want to become a filmmaker. To my way of thinking, they were corporate creations. But when I was 10, I learned that there was such a thing as a tape recorder. And I understood intuitively what it did and how it did it. Enemy tripod machines now in sight. I would record from the radio onto the tape recorder. "War of the Worlds" by H.G. Wells. And then cut the tape into pieces, and then rearrange the pieces and tape them in a different order than they were recorded, flip them upside down and play them backwards, and hear what that sounded like. (Audio played backwards) And then I came back from school one day and turned on the radio, and I was disoriented for a moment because I heard something coming out of the radio, that sounded like what I had recorded the day before. (Radio static) And it was a record made in France of musique concrte by Pierre Henry and Pierre Schaeffer. That was a revelation to me, that there were people in the world, French people, doing what I was doing. And they were making records of it. (Cheers and applause) And so I suddenly saw what I was doing had a broader application. (Waves crashing on shore) I loved Ingmar Bergman films at age 15, and I loved Kurosawa... (Horses' hooves clattering) ...because the imprint of the personality of these filmmakers was very strong. In 1963, I went to a university in Paris, studying for a year right at the height of the New Wave. I saw Jean-Luc Godard's film "Breathless" and I could tell that rules were being broken. Pa-pa-pa-pa-pa-pa Patricia, Patricia And that got me excited. I got injected with the film bug, and went to USC. I met Walter Murch in film school. He was a graduate student; I was an undergrad. It was very easy to make friends. That was part of the fun of being there. (Walter Murch) It was only when I got to film school that I realised that you have to do to sound in film the very kinds of things that I was doing with these random sounds that I recorded back in the early '50s. (Various sound effects) (George Lucas) Walter was coming up with different sound ideas and running tracks backwards. Basically, that's all he was doing, creating soundtracks. (Walter Murch) But it was an unusual time to go to film school because television was killing film. (Static) President Kennedy has been shot in Dallas, Texas. (Gary Rydstrom) The '60s were a time when we were focused on what we saw on television and the news. - (Sirens) - (Crowd screaming) I think it was a most powerful civil rights protest. (Commotion) (Gary Rydstrom) Full of unrest and politics, Hollywood felt out of sync. (Footsteps) I want to hear nothing more about this troublemaker. (Gary Rydstrom) It was rock and roll and musicians like The Beatles that were capturing culture's imagination... (Cheers) ...more than film. (Gentle music) (Walter Murch) And that year was the absolute bottom of a number of films produced in Hollywood. The model on which they had built their studios was not working anymore. There's not enough jobs. But kind of a life raft that was extended to us young film students was a fellowship by Warner Bros., which George won. And George met the only other person on the lot, who had a beard, who was Francis Coppola, who was directing "Finian's Rainbow". We had both been film students, long hair, everybody else on the crew was over 50. So at the end of "Finian's Rainbow", Francis wanted to make a movie on his own called "Rain People". And he said, "Do you know anybody who knows anything about sound?" And I said, "Oh, I got the perfect guy, Walter Murch." (Upbeat music) "Rain People" is a road movie, much like "Easy Rider". Our two guys in "Easy Rider" were travelling west to east. "The Rain People" was travelling the other way. (George Lucas) So we built this truck, and just went across the country, making a movie. (Music continues) And it was the Nagra, which was smaller, lighter sound equipment that actually started the ability to shoot movies on the street. (Indistinct chatter) (Walter Murch) If we can make a film out of a shoe store in Nebraska, why do we have to be in Hollywood? So we moved to San Francisco. (Upbeat music) Francis, George and me were all in our late 20s... and we formed American Zoetrope. One of the dreams or goals of Zoetrope was to break down the barriers between picture editing and sound editing and sound mixing. (Sound mixer beeping) Then I could let my musique concrte demon out of the bottle completely, which was a whole new direction. (Gentle music) So immediately after finishing the mix on "Rain People", George and I got together to write the screenplay for "THX 1138". And we got financing from Warner's. I would cut picture during the day, then Walter would come in at night, and cut the sound. (Various sound effects) I took it upon myself to record every sound effect for the film myself. (High-pitched beep) (Machine whirring) (George Lucas) "THX" had a very eerie, strange soundtrack. (Walter Murch) Based on the dismal performance of the film, commercially, Warner Bros. cancelled the development advance that they had made to Zoetrope. (Music) They claimed that this was a personal loan to Francis. And he owed them all this money back. The equivalent today would be 3 million. Bankrupted our company, made it so I couldn't work in the business for a while. (Walter Murch) It was the end of the road for Zoetrope. And in that state, Francis was offered to direct this sleazy gangster film that 12 other directors had turned down... ...which was "The Godfather". ("The Godfather" theme music) But he wanted to invest the film with the sensibility of the European film and art that had influenced all of us. And he pulled all of us into it. When I was a kid growing up, one of the composers who was doing the most advanced thinking at the time was John Cage. He was proselytising that everything is music. (Running water) Even the sound that the audience makes in the theatre is music. And even the sound of the lid of the piano going down is a kind of music. He made us pay attention. (Metallic thud) So in "The Godfather", the moment leading up to Sollozzo's death, it is accompanied by this screechy John Cagey sound. (Speaking Italian on telephone) (Train screeching to a halt) (Gunshot) What you're actually listening to are Michael's neurons clashing against each other as he's making the decision to actually kill these people. And the murder of a dream he had of having nothing to do with the family. (Train rumbles) It's not technically music, but it conjures up emotion and meaning. (Orchestral music) Obviously, it became a big hit. And that bailed Zoetrope out. We were able to keep going after that. This one time I'll let you ask me about my affairs. But the soundtrack of "The Godfather", as it was released in theatres in 1972, was virtually identical to the soundtrack of "Gone with the Wind", released in 1939. You will promise, won't you? It's a mono film with just a single speaker behind the screen. Is that... is that all, Ashley? (Walter Murch) So sound in film didn't really change. But contrast that with the music industry, which was adopting all of this new technology, things like the LP, which, by the late 1950s had stereo sound. (Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 in C Minor) Stereo spread the music across two different speakers... (Music grows louder) ...surrounding you and immersing you in the music. The Beatles, in particular, were testing the boundaries of the medium. I remember when I played "Revolver"... ...it was a visceral feeling, you could feel the sound in your body. Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream (William Whittington) And the song "Revolution 9". Nine, number nine George Martin brought this ability to mix and create sound design, that would then be melded with rock and roll. (Gary Rydstrom) "Revolution 9" was fascinating to me because it was just like musique concrte. As we come out of the hippie '60s era of rock music, we brought that sensibility to cinema, and thought, "Why can't movies be in stereo?" (Walter Murch) It was in that over-heated environment that Dolby came along from the music industry in the mid 70s, and took the lid off. Providing stereo sound in more and more theatres. I remember a nameless film executive at one of the distributors in Hollywood, who actually hit his desk and said, "Goddamn it, "it's good stories and comfortable seats, that's what sells movies, not sound!" But then in 1976, with "A Star Is Born", Barbra Streisand had the imagination to say, "I want to do this vast stereo sound with my film," and just to tell the studio, "We're gonna do it." (Audience applause) With one more look at you That all-enveloping sound and especially coming from the audiences, to involve you as an audience member into the concert. Leave a troubled past and I might start anew On "A Star Is Born" Barbra Streisand insisted on, and in fact got an extraordinary amount of time to do the sound edit and sound mix. (Cheers and applause) In fact it was something on the order of magnitude of four months, at a time when it was more traditional to have seven weeks. (Upbeat music) The deal with First Artist was that the artist was responsible for anything over 6 million dollars. I spent the 6 million dollars on the movie. But then when I got into sound, I spent another million dollars. Are you a figment of my imagination? Or I'm one of yours When Warner Bros. saw the film, they liked it so much that they didn't make me pay the million dollars. I thought it was wonderful. I was willing to spend it. (Cheers and applause) There is a degree of reality that you can get from stereo that's never possible with a mono soundtrack. And bless Barbra Streisand for recognising the value. (Cheers and applause) (Gary Rydstrom) It wasn't just the way films were played in theatres that was changing. It was the way they were recorded, too. I was a teenager in the '70s, and I saw the film "Nashville". (Brass band plays) And I think that was probably the film that turned my ears on to what was possible in a movie with sound. When they come into the airport, that's an incredibly beautiful piece of sound. (Sound of plane in background) Barbara Jean, ladies and gentlemen. There's airplanes that come in and out and obliterate what people are saying. There's a reporter on a microphone. There's a marching band. And thank you, Franklin High School band. I think you kids get better every year. (Applause) All right twirlers, let's twirl. You're woven through that entire tapestry and the sound is what's pulling you and telling you where you're gonna go next. Jim Webb obviously had worked with Robert Altman on many of his films. He was the master of multi-track, just ahead of their time and pushing the limits. (David Macmillan) Before that, they recorded one track, but now we don't shoot two tracks or three tracks. We have about eight, ten, sixteen tracks. Other members of Chamber of Commerce understand reportedly earlier on... You know, everybody had a mic. No matter how many people were in the scene, they all had microphones and were on mic all the time. All the other friends, members and... (Exclaims) She's fallen somewhere down... It was amazing, how the story was driven by the sound in a way that I don't think had happened before then in American films. (Steven Spielberg) My generation, you know, Francis and George and Marty and Brian and my whole group that I sort of grew up with - very sound-conscious generation. (Gary Rydstrom) So between the technological and creative advances of the early 1970s sound was taking route in a new American Renaissance of movies, in a way that had never been heard before. Oh, I understand. But heading into the late '70s, even bigger breakthroughs were on the way. (George Lucas) Most directors spent a lot of time with their cameramen and actors. I just take the same amount of time and spend it with the sound designer. But when I started my next film, Francis was doing "The Conversation" and Walter was busy on that. So I called Ken Miura at USC and said, "Do you have anybody else like Walter?" He said, "Yeah, I got somebody here." (Ben Burtt) My mother tells me that as a toddler I loved to act out to music, that if she put a record on, I would not only dance around the room, but I would assume characters, I'd be a cowboy or I'd be some kind of pirate or something. But when I was about six years old, I had a serious illness and I was in bed for a few weeks and very weak. But my father had access to a tape recorder. And he brought that home. I began recording television shows by putting the microphone up to the TV and recording the Saturday morning cartoons. There were two television stations and one of them had the Warner Bros. package of syndicated film. I loved recording Errol Flynn movies in particular. (Upbeat music) (Gunshot) (Ben Burtt) They ran the Cagney gangster movies. And Bogart films. So I got very familiar with the sounds of Warner Bros' classic library. The other channel pretty much showed MGM. Somewhere over the rainbow... Singing in the rain, just singing in the rain... (Ben Burtt) As the other children were developing a love for certain music, I was listening to explosions. (Explosion) (Ben Burtt) So I began collecting things I liked. And I'd seek after a movie just to record the battle scenes and just listen to them. I think the thousands of hours I spent doing that as a kid, unknown to me, that was building up an inventory of how sound in movies was part of the experience. I started making my own little movies. In those days you couldn't record live sound while shooting super 8 films. But I could generate a soundtrack after the fact by taking sound effects I had extracted from movies and television shows and putting them in my movies. (Gunfire) I first met Ben Burtt at USC Film School. We kind of were kindred spirits. Whereas a lot of the students were into all the Antonioni and the arty films, we kind of liked the traditional Hollywood fun films and serials. (Explosion) Rod Flash. (Richard Anderson) We wrote this movie called "Rod Flash Conquers Infinity". Ben and I dressed up in these knock-off Flash Gordon things that we got at an army surplus store in Hollywood. (Explosion) We were making the voyage to the planet Extraneous. (Dramatic music) We discover a dinosaur. And of course we have a pretty girl in a cape. (Dinosaur roars) And Ben did the sound on that one. So I was just finishing at USC Cinema, and Gary Kurtz who had represented George Lucas, came down to school, looking for a student interested in sound who they could mould into their own ways. I went out to the studio and met with the two of them. And they outlined the film they were gonna make. They had artwork on the walls done by Ralph McQuarrie, concept art for the film. I was astounded by what I saw. This was the film I always wanted to work on. This had spaceships and monsters and weapons like lightsabres. It was called "Star Wars". So I leap at the chance and the initial discussion was, "Would you like to help collect sounds for a Wookiee?" This is still about a year away from principal photography. I put Ben on in the beginning because I knew I had to figure out a way of making these characters real. And I knew it depended on how we developed these languages, and that's what Ben spent the better part of a year doing. (Ben Burtt) We were trying to find an animal that had enough vocal expressiveness in its sounds that we could use it for the Wookiee. So there was a young bear named Pooh. And we spent an afternoon with this bear in a pen, coaxing it to say different sounds. The way they got it to make sound was to show it bread. It loved bread. - The bear would... - (Imitates bear growl) (Growls) Then you'd give him the bread and then he'd be like... (Imitates bear sounds) George wanted to know before they filmed the movie how would the Wookiee sound. Well, you said it, Chewie. This is not the way that most filmmakers worked at that time. (George Lucas) I knew the sound was part of the foundation of what the movie was gonna be. So everything had to have been figured out way ahead of time. So I proceeded to work my way through the screenplay of "Star Wars". I read through it, made some notes, broke it down, and I realised there were hundreds of things in the script from Darth Vader's breathing, and you had the Death Star, you had TIE fighters and a whole library of things in there. I said, "Well, do you want sounds for the rest of these things as well?" The answer was, "Yeah, sure. Just spend some time." And so I operated out of my apartment for many months coming up with expeditions to go out and gather sound, while George was off in England, busy shooting the movie. I was still based in LA. He wanted me to go out and record real motors and real airplanes, and real rusty doors. This hum of a projector, a buzzing sound behind the television set. I tried to go to factories and a scuba shop. I just started recording everything I could get my hands on. And to populate the universe of "Star Wars" with the sounds of things that we would hear as real. We didn't wanna follow the conventions of science fiction that were current at the time which was things like "Forbidden Planet" or "War of the Worlds", using electronic music technology. We didn't use synthesisers or anything like that. We used real sound effects. (Spacecraft engines roar) (Ben Burtt) So a year or so went by of me collecting and when they returned from filming, I got a note saying, "We'll take the tapes and deliver them to Northern California." They were doing the picture editing in George's house. So I started to cut my sound effects into the editor's cuts of the movie. But R2-D2 took a long time. There were many versions of that over months that were failures. You have to actually make him talk and make you understand what he's saying. (Ben Burtt) And R2 had no mouth at all. What Mission? What are you talking about? We were very worried that it would be incomprehensible. What eventually happened was, as George and I were talking to each other, we would say, "R2 comes up to this point in the movie and he goes..." (Imitates R2D2 speech) (R2D2 computerised speech) And suddenly we realised we were talking with expressive sounds. They had the intonation of meaning. We were verbalising a sound that worked for us. (R2D2 computerised speech) And that led down the road of doing just that. I could do a vocalisation and play something on the keyboard... ...and you could sort of work two things together. (R2D2 computerised speech) What mission? What are you talking about? (R2D2 computerised speech) I've just about had enough of you. Go that way. You'll be malfunctioning within a day, you near-sighted scrap pile. (Bang) We were not sure that audiences would comprehend this at all though. I didn't know. I was nervous, as anybody would be. I thought maybe this was probably the end. I'd go back and become a science teacher somewhere in the East. (George Lucas) You got to remember, my first film was a failure. I thought, the ultimate honour would be if we could be invited to a "Star Trek" convention. I could sell T-shirts. Maybe we'd have a table there to hand out posters or something. That to me would have been the peak of my career. When the film was finished, Fox didn't really know what they had. I sat in a meeting with a Fox executive with Gary Kurtz and the Fox Executive said, "We like your movie, Gary, but we think it's a sleeper. "We think it's gonna open very slowly." I sat in the Coronet Theater in San Francisco for the opening show there, 70mm print. I was sitting actually in the middle of the audience and this guy sitting next to me as the plane comes overhead... (Dramatic music) (Laser firing) And this guy goes, "Holy shit. Holy shit. Holy shit." And two weeks later, there were lines around the blocks across the country waiting for "Star Wars". (Applause) The award goes to Mr Benjamin Burtt, Jr. ("Star Wars theme music) Thank you very much. I would like to, of course, thank George Lucas who had all the great ideas and provided all the inspiration for the things in "Star Wars". Thank you very much. (Applause) It is the imaginative director who will say, "Let's take the next step in the sound story." George Lucas and Gary Kurtz, Barbra Streisand on "A Star Is Born", Francis Coppola, Stanley Kubrick, those are the key players who will say, "Yes, I'll do this." (Cheers and applause) "Star Wars" was a revolution. It was that soundtrack that changed everything, 1977. (Gary Rydstrom) In people's minds, it was a time when sound was cool. And it created this era driven by the filmmakers. At that time, David Lynch and Alan Splet came out of AFI and were a partnership. These really great minds were doing experimental things. I believe the source of everyone's creativity comes from within. ('Cello being played) And Alan, he was a born soundman. Very interested in music, especially classical music. And he was a joyous experimenter. The trick for the human being is experiencing this deepest level of life. The unbounded infinite ocean of consciousness at the base of all matter and mind, where sounds play a huge role in the abstract cinema. You wanna bring people into a world and give them an experience and you could get lost in there for years. (Static effects) So it was in the air - breaking the mould, and trying things that seemed crazy and seeing if they worked. The '70s was a really good time of filmmaking. There was no more experimental or chaotic film in all of history, that so changed the way film sound was done and presented as "Apocalypse Now". (Helicopter blades whirring) ("Apocalypse Now" theme music) During the shooting of "Apocalypse Now", Francis heard a record by Tomita which was "The Planets" by Gustav Holst in 4-track. The idea was that you put speakers at each corner of your room, you sat in the centre and you were surrounded by the music. (Dramatic music) Francis heard it and thought this is how I want the film to sound. But all of us working on the sound - Richards Beggs, Mark Berger and myself, we'd only work in mono. None of us had even worked on a stereo film let alone this whole new 6-track surround format. We were exploring the unknown going into this whole new continent where we move objects all the way around the theatre which had never been done before. (Helicopter blades whirring) If you're breaking new ground then people who are interested in new ground come because they want to participate in it and more ground gets broken. (Randy Thom) I spent about half my time on "Apocalypse" in the mix, sitting there watching Walter Murch and Mark Berger and Richard Beggs and Francis, figuring out what this movie was going to sound like. Working on "Apocalypse Now" was my film school. Ultimately, we wound up spending a year and a half editing the sound and nine months doing the mix which is just unheard of. (Randy Thom) Just about everything that could go right or go wrong did. The whole "Apocalypse Now" experience was like dropping acid. This is the end, beautiful friend What you have at the beginning of the film is Captain Willard in his Saigon hotel room hallucinating, regretting what he's done in the war. Everything that you see and hear is being filtered through his consciousness. (Ceiling fan blades whirring) Waiting for the summer rain, yeah ( "The End", The Doors) And that decision is what allowed Walter to do what he did with the sound. (Helicopter blades whirring) To tell the story more from the point of view of this character in this crazy situation in Vietnam. Saigon. Shit. And it frames the whole movie. (Helicopter blades whirring) (Indistinct chatter) The most interesting sound is designed into the script and is designed into the scenes. (Walter Murch) So I wrote out a script for the sound treatment of the film to guide the mix. (Helicopters whirring) (Water splashing) (Pat Jackson) Walter decided that it was more efficient if each editor be responsible for one whole layer of sound, so that the helicopters were edited by one editor and the background voices were edited by another editor. (Walter Murch) Les Hodgson was in charge of atmospheres. Les Wiggins was in charge of munitions. Pat Jackson was in charge of the boat. So that there was a consistency. (Walter Murch) To treat each sound editor as the head of an instrument grouping in an orchestra. You are the lead violin. You are head of the woodwinds. You are head of percussion. You are head of the brasses. And as Chief is dying, Pat Jackson changed the pitch of the boat so that the boat sound is going down. (Groans) I think the biggest lesson I learned from "Apocalypse Now" sitting there was figuring out from moment to moment what sounds to use and what sounds not to use. Those kinds of decisions are the essence of film. And the exhibitors are going to play the picture on our terms, with our sound, the way we want them to show it. (Walter Murch) The film did run in this 6-track surround format. And as things have evolved over the next 30, 40 years, that format is now the ground standard of how you mix a film. (Helicopter blades whirring) The soundtrack is at least as important as the film. And the director of the soundtrack of the entire movie is Walter Murch. (Applause) In a way, Walter Murch is the father of us all in this modern era of film sound. (Gary Rydstrom) "Apocalypse Now" marked the culmination of over 50 years of film sound development. And its repercussions can still be felt today. But the next big challenge for sound was how to work in the crazy new digital world. (John Lasseter) I always thought that animation was such a visual medium. But when I started putting just the right sound effects it just made it a thousand times better. February of 1986, we formed Pixar. I had been working on animating these desk lamps. So I made this little one and a half minute short film, called Luxo Jr. And of course we wanted Ben Burtt to do the sound, but they told us he was busy. And they say, but there's this young guy that's been working with Ben. He's really, really good. Let's give this new guy a try. His name's Gary Rydstrom. But I want Ben Burtt. I think all of my early opportunities were shows that people wanted Ben Burtt, is how it works in the world, right? We'd like Ben Burtt, please, he's not available, who else you got? (John Lasseter) Now, Luxo Jr. was definitely a huge step forward for animation. And it had a very real look to him. And Gary kept looking at it going, "I wanna ground this in reality." I had this digital workstation called the Synclavier, where I could take real sounds, load them into the computer and manipulate them on the keyboard. Like scraping metal, the screwing in of lightbulbs. Harsh, boring sounds. And the springs... You record sounds you don't know what they're going to be for, but they're interesting. And later on, you'll find little titbits that have a little vocal quality. It's sad or happy. And next thing you know, he brought me down and he showed me a first pass of Luxo Jr. And the characters came alive. (Various sound effects) He crafted their voices and he gave them weight. Gary got it. He took the medium of computer animation to new heights. And pretty much everything Pixar did, Gary did the sound for. I thought this is cool, I'm part of something really big here. George Lucas and Ben Burtt, Francis Coppola and Walter Murch, David Lynch and Alan Splet. Great directors connected at the hip to a sound person. One of mine was with John Lasseter... ...and another was with Steven Spielberg. Action. Welcome to Jurassic Park. (Dramatic music) We're gonna make a fortune with this place. I think Gary Rydstrom's greatest contribution to "Jurassic Park" was presuming what dinosaurs sounded like. To make them extraordinary, but also natural. (Dinosaur groans) (Shrieks) (Dinosaur groans) (Loud roar) And the first time I ever heard the T-Rex, I did literally fall off my chair. Talk about innovative, it was just unbelievable the sound that he did on "Jurassic Park". So we just asked him to do sound for us on the first computer animated feature film. You've got a friend in me (Andrew Stanton) I just appreciated how Gary was making sure that the sounds he used supported the emotional intention of the narrative of whatever was going on. Say, what's that button do? - I'll show you. - Buzz Lightyear to the rescue. - Whoa. - Wow. Hey, Woody's got something like that. His is a pull-string only. We wanted to have one thing that both Woody and Buzz had that you could tell Woody's was older and cheesier. And Buzz's was new and high-tech and that was a sound system. I had an old Casper doll. There's a record in there that he is... Come on, Cas. See that's like, "I love you." (Laughs) He's sounding awesome these days. Oh, come on, Casper. Reach for the sky. Gary loved that idea. We were innovating with computers so much and creating new tools for animation. Therefore, he was at the same time using computers for the first time, in really clever ways to do sound design. You know, it's mind-blowing to think that just, I don't know, even many people around the industry were still cutting sound at that time on mag. (Gary Rydstrom) Up until the early 1990s, we were cutting one track of sound at a time on mag film. But by the mid 1990s, sound editing migrated to computer systems like Pro Tools. Now we could see the waveforms we were editing, but more importantly, sound editors could finally hear how all their tracks played together. (Various sound effects) It was a very exciting time for all people in visual and sound. (Dramatic music) (Dane Davis) So all of a sudden I get this call. The Wachowskis said, "Remember that really great script called 'The Matrix' "that we used to talk about on the mixing stage? It's green-lit." And the fact that the movie was about this digital reality that was coming through a wire, I thought there was some parallel to trying to do all of the sound design in the digital world. And it was a chance to apply this technology, that was still sketchy, but allowed for all these possibilities. (Electronic sound effects) One of the first sounds that I developed was the sound of Neo perceiving himself being digitised. Did you...? In the digital world, everything is zeros and ones, just little boxes basically. I wanted to get that feeling across to the audience, the jaggedness. (Loud scream) (Computerised beeping) Computers did allow us to do some very fun creative work on "The Matrix". There would not have been time otherwise. And I've always had a love hate thing with technology. Computers suck. Part of me just wants to live in the woods and carve sticks. I have seen the future, this is it, it definitely does not work. But another part of me just loves all these fancy tools. (David Lynch) These days there are so many tools to manipulate a sound that now pretty much in sound, if you can think it, you can do it. (Various sound effects) (Gary Rydstrom) But ultimately it wasn't about the technology. It's the contribution of dozens of sound people. A circle of talent who collaborate behind the scenes to help tell the story. The human voice - it's the great possession of the individual. It can have all sorts of nuances, and it's unique. If you listen real close, you can hear them whisper their legacy to you. Carpe diem, seize the day, boys. When you're recording production sound, what you're really trying to capture is the performance. You have my permission to die. Peoples' voices are really complex instruments. With a boom microphone, you're about maybe 10 inches away from a person's mouth. It's an enormous sense of intimacy that you get. (Barbra Streisand) On "Funny Girl", we filmed it to a pre-recorded track. For whatever my man is, I am his... Willy leans towards me and says, "What do you think?" I said, "It could be better," because I believe in working in the moment. I have to do it live. And he said OK. So they put a boom like this, because it had to be close up. When I know I'll come back On my knees someday For whatever my man is I am his forevermore And I thought, that's the kind of feeling I'd like to get into "My Man". (Gentle music) As a director I can hear the truth when an actor is indicating something or... ...feeling it. - What are you, a demon? - I'm not. You know me. - You spit on the Torah. - I love the Torah. You spit on it. To spit on everything on everyone. On nature itself. In God's face, in my face, in Hadass' face... As a production sound mixer, one film that I'm very proud of is a film that Patty Jenkins directed. It was called "Monster". It was about the serial killer, Aileen Wuornos. You don't have to do this. - Get down. - You don't. We captured every little breath. (Crying) Oh, God. Oh, God. My wife. My wife. And my daughter is having a baby. Oh, God. Oh, God. I'm sorry. That was one of those moments where literally the hair stood on the back of your neck at the end of the performance. But just all those things that you battle as a sound mixer. You're dealing with wind. That is never our friend. There's many, many things that are required for things to look right on camera that are noisy. (Gunshots) I know the ships can sail into the triangles not necessarily... Let's see who's guilty of putting me in this dreadful pickle. And if you're hearing those, that takes you out of the story. (Quiet music) That's why we edit the dialogue. (Quiet music) (Film projector whirring) My mom is Kay Rose, and she was the first woman to win an Oscar for sound. She could hear clicks and pops that shouldn't be there, take it out, fill it with ambience, and it would be very smooth. "Ordinary People" was a movie my mom and I worked on and it was one of the hardest sound jobs we've ever done. The movie is about a family affected by the death of their older son. The surviving son goes to a psychiatrist. Uh, hi. Yeah. Come in. It's OK. They all do that. They chose an aluminium warehouse near an airport for these very intimate scenes with the psychiatrist... Sit down. ...which was awful. I had a fairly strong idea about sound, but I had not directed a film before so I needed help, and she did just a great job. (Victoria Rose Sampson) It took weeks to try to get out the little clicks and pops and planes for ten minutes of production dialogue. Weeks! You wanna tell me about it? (Robert Redford) The silence was meant to illustrate pain, the disconnect between people. You can go upstairs to that room of yours and clean out the closet, because it really is a mess. (Gwendelyn Whittle) The dialogue department we're the queens of the soundtrack. Jake, my Jake! Everything falls apart without it. It's the thing that everything has to work around. You don't want to lose a moment in a film saying to your friend, "What did he say?" That's why sometimes we need to shoot ADR. (Gasping) (Groaning) ADR stands for... Lilian... ...automated dialogue replacement. (Gasps) It's dialogue that's re-recorded in a sound studio. Good. You pick out some lines that might be really low to hear. The actors have to come in, re-record, and then we, as editors, have to cut it to try to match those peoples' mouths. So Beth Bergeron hired me on "A League of Their Own". One of the scenes that I cut was when Tom Hanks is yelling... There's no crying in baseball. (Crying) Her crying on the set was actually really kind of soft. Are you crying? And so in order to get her crying again, you had to get Tom Hanks as well. Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey. Because they're overlapping each other. All right. Listen, listen, listen. Rogers Hornsby was my manager, and he called me a talking pile of pig shit. So that way when they mix, they could then bring up her crying when they need to. - And did I cry? - (Sobs) No. No. No. Because there's no crying in baseball. I loved working on that film. (Grunts) (Crowd cheers) But our job is also to add the background people, and that's what we call group ADR. (Crowd chanting) Most people might not realise that that whole opening of "Argo", the assumption is, "Oh, that's all recorded on set,." But the truth is all of that's reconstructed. (Crowd chanting) We had over a hundred Farsi-speaking Persian extras. (Crowd chanting) We were micing the crowd from right in the middle of it, and from behind windows, from the rooftops. After a few hours of this, everyone was like hugging, and a few people were crying, and we found out that some of our voice talent had actually lived through the revolution. (Crowd chanting) And all of that emotion that we were recording, it became part of the DNA of the scene. (Crowd chanting) (Gunshots) (Commotion) (Gunshots) (Greg Hedgepath) When people ask me about working on "Selma" I tell them it's the first film that I worked on that really meant something. (Bobbi Banks) When they're on the bridge, they're running for their lives so they don't get killed. You want the audience to feel the pain. (Music) (Chanting) (Coughing) (Greg Hedgepath) When I had people running by the mics, it's more real because it's got movement. It's got cloth movement. It's got feet. They're turning their heads and they're doing efforts, and so it just sounds more real. It was so important to me to work on this film. It allows me to relive some of the things, as I was a child... (Sombre music) ...that speaks to what people went through, what we're still going through today. I'm just really proud that I was able to work on it. (Upbeat music) (Gary Rydstrom) Surrounding the voices in the movie is a whole world of sound effects created and cut by the sound editors, and it consists of three distinct parts. Highway to the danger zone (Cece Hall) I got hired to do "Top Gun" with George Watters. So I spent a week in San Diego recording jets with John Fasal. (Plane engines roaring) But the jets themselves are not that interesting. They sounded kind of wimpy. (Film projector whirring) So I created a library of mostly exotic animal roars, lions and tiger roars and monkey screeches. (Jet engines roaring) And that wound up being the thing. It gave them a cutting, sharp feeling. (Jet engines roaring) (Explosion) It's the most labour-intensive editing process I've ever experienced. It took forever, which the studio was very frightened by and didn't understand. And so at one point in the middle of this process, there was an executive from the studio. He came over to fire me, and he said, "This movie isn't about the sound. But months later, we were nominated for an Academy Award. And I will say that he sent me flowers, and the note said, "I guess it was about the sound." (Chuckles) She's also a civilian contractor so you do not salute her, but you better listen to her. (Anna Behlmer) People who say, "Well, you know, it's a big action war movie. "A guy should do the sound." It's like, why? Has he been in a war? (Swords clattering) (Anna Behlmer) This idea of one gender being better at it than another, I think is kind of silly. It's experience. You're sitting in front of this big piece of equipment and it looks very complicated and technical. It's like you peek into the cockpit and there's all that equipment. It's like you want to have some big guy who looks like he was in the Air Force in there, 'cause if anything goes wrong, that person will... get a screwdriver. I don't know, because the job consists of pushing little buttons and turning little knobs, and that's not particularly a macho endeavour at all. (Object clatters) But if you don't see anybody like yourself doing something, then that doesn't seem like a place you could fit in. (John Roesch) Foley is a subset of sound effects. (Footsteps) We're called Foley artists. And truly what we do is custom sound effects. (Water splashing) (Alyson Dee Moore) We're really like performers. Getting into their mindset. We really give them character. (Coat rustles) (Objects rustling) It's that detail that you don't really think about that makes it come alive. (Glass shatters) There's a famous story where Jack Foley... - (Glass chinking) - ...heard the director of "Spartacus" bemoaning the fact that the armour they were wearing, sounded like tin pots. (Armour chinking) They were saying, "We'll have to go back and reshoot the picture." Huge cost. Jack said, "Wait a second." He runs out to his car, he grabs some props, some big set of keys etc., comes in, and works his magic. (Suspenseful music) Which is kind of fun, because that's what Foley really is for us. It's magic. (Armour chinking) (Atmospheric music) The last subset of sound effects are ambiences, atmospheric beds of sounds that editors lay underneath everything else. (Sophia Ford Coppola) I think on any film, like "Lost in Translation", building the world and the atmosphere, the sound is such a big part of it that you don't realise until you're working on it. (Various background outdoor street sounds) Picking up all these little details and adding these layers that makes you feel like you're really there. (Train station announcement in Japanese in background) There's this whole other world that it brings - it's really half the movie. It's a bed of sound in the scene that sets you in that environment. It could be traffic. (Car engine roaring) A bed of Cicadas. (Cicadas chirping) The sound of a room... ...or birds. (Birds chirping) It has to be evocative. (Robert Redford) When I was 11 years old, I had a mild case of polio. So as a reward for getting better, my mom drove me to Yosemite National Park. Once I went through that tunnel and it opened up, and I saw Half Dome and El Capitan, I said, "Well, this is it for me." I don't wanna look at this. I wanna be in it. (Waterfall flowing) The sound of those falls rushing past me as I climbed up. The power of water. I like to use that in film. (Christopher Boyes) I was working on "A River Runs Through It", and the sound designer just said, "Look, I just need you to go out and record sounds." (Flicks switch) I knew every stream within a hundred miles. (Flowing water) When I heard it back in the film, I could feel the moisture of the stream, and I could hear the presence of this volume of air. (Birds chirping) That hit me so heavily, I thought to myself, "This is me with my father fishing as an eight-year-old boy." (Gentle piano music) It brings me to a really peaceful, important time in my life. Everything has emotion, and therefore spirit. (Eugene Gearty) Ang really wanted the wind to have its own character in this movie. (Clothes flapping in wind) (Ang Lee) Wind sound was very expressive for the characters. How much they're quiet about their feelings. - (Wind howls quietly) - (Door closes) How much repression they endure. That's the art of sound. That ability to interpret expressively things that are happening. The final element of the soundtrack is music. It has a direct connection to emotion. (Rousing music) The great thing about music is it's there that you, as an audience, can connect on a human level. It has a way of inviting you in. The way in which he records them, the way in which they're executed is extremely lavish and epic really. (Music grows louder) (Richard King) I love that Hans doesn't give up, and he just keeps trying to make it better and better. He's obsessed. Looks who's here. (Hans Zimmer) I think the heart has to come first and then the intellect follows. Hey, guys. - Daddy. - Hey, how are you? Your job is to come up with the unimaginable for them. (Explosion) (Dramatic music) You think about people's favourite movie moments and it's usually a score element. (Shuri gauntlets firing) "Black Panther" was set in Africa, and music is so important in setting that up. So my composer, he was the first person I called. When I write music for any of his projects, I'm always pushing myself to another kind of level. Music is what ties the whole thing together. (Rhythmic music) Experimenting in contemporary music... ...but also not being scared to bring in the classic, really heroic theme. (Dramatic music) And how do we tie that together in one consistent piece of music? We're going to write something new, create something completely different. Then we watched it and it was like, "This is perfect." (Rhythmic music) (Dramatic music) And a song can do in three minutes what a really great movie needs hours to do. (Teri E. Dorman) It's the collaborative effort of all those people... ...that make that soundtrack what it is. And the very last step is to provide that to the sound mixing stage. Re-recording mixing is a key component of film sound. You take all the elements from the sound editors and you finally bring them together like a conductor would. You may turn up the music to enhance the emotion. (Gentle music) (Gary Rydstrom) You may turn up the sound effects to add a visceral punch. (Gunshots) Or you may turn them both down to focus on a line of dialogue. I'm glad it's you... (Heavy rain) Mixing also involves thinking about where sounds are placed on the screen and how they move. (Skip Livesay) We used this panning technique everywhere in "Roma". Like what components could go from that side to that side, left, centre, right. (Indistinct chatter) Have the voices move that way when the camera pans that way. Alfonso was constantly trying to get us to keep things moving. (Indistinct chatter) "Roma" is filled with a lot of foreground/background sounds. The film is very aural. There are a lot of sounds going on. (Indistinct chatter) The dance between the elements is what I consider cinematic. This is what the core of mixing is - taking all these components, creating a place for them all. (Horse neighs) (Anna Behlmer) So it's just really building the tracks slowly... (Swords clanging) ...having everything play harmoniously. (Shouting) At one point you go, "OK, we got a movie. "Sounds like a movie." (Yelling) (Swords clattering) When you feel those goosebumps then you've done it right. (Gentle music) (Teri E. Dorman) The circle of talent is a collaborative group of people that spend hours and hours and days and days in the trenches that are doing all the work. And if people have to try and find meaning in what they do, it's the group of people that you're working with. (Ben Burtt) But it's easy to lose sight of that. Because I had public success so quickly in my career, you come to work every day thinking you're an Oscar-winning genius. Thank you very much. But you can't put that kind of pressure on yourself, that each time you do something it's going to shake the world. And it led to a nervous breakdown. It finally came one day. I couldn't work anymore. I was just sitting at the console crying to myself. Didn't know why. It was because I had invested too much in it. (Gentle piano music) One of the main things I would always try to do was get home for dinner with my family. I have to appreciate my wife, Peggy, on all the years, she's dragged me back out of my world of make-believe. Don't lose your foot. Plant it in something outside. Those are good things. You get to the point where you realise that you want to be happy doing the work you're doing. The pleasure is on... what happens on a daily basis. You come on any given Tuesday and you're working with making pass-bys out of bicycle rattling. If you can enjoy that and see that for what it is for a daily task, then that's where the pleasure will lie. (Bobbi Banks) I love what I do. It's very tedious. It's very time-consuming. But when I can play something back and I can feel it, I was like, "Oh, man." You know, it's just... it's really satisfying. (Pat Jackson) I just couldn't believe I was getting paid real money to have so much fun. (Laughs) I always say I would hate to have a real job. Pinch myself every day. (Gary Rydstrom) Even in my early sound career, I remember how magical it felt to me. Movies were a place to have emotion that was safe. Of all the ways, all the things I can do in movies or have done in movies, sound is still the best way to experience emotion working on a movie to me. (Walter Murch) So the creation of the sound film made sound an art form. (Helicopter whirring) It's been very valuable in the evolution of humans relationship to the cosmos. The work you all do make massive contributions to the telling of the story. (Makes sound) And I love all your cleverness and ingenuity, and I love the sense of fun. (Scraping and creaking) (Lightsabre swishing) It makes these moments eternal. (Tarzan howling) You know how to whistle, don't you, Steve? (Whistles) (Beeping) (Shouts) Come on, men! - (Yelling) - (Plane engine roaring) - (Foreboding music) - (Screams) - (Glass shatters) - (Boulder rumbles) (Explosion) (Yelps then sighs) I'll be right here. Run, Forrest, run! (Swords clatter) Hold on! (Bullets ricocheting) (Screaming) (Millennium falcon engine roaring) (Owl hooting in the distance) (Cicadas chirping) (Thunder) (Birds chirping) (Gentle orchestral music) (Gentle piano music) |
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