For nearly a century, only 11 movies won the Academy Award for Best Picture without also being nominated for Best Editing. And 40 percent of all Best Picture winners also won the statuette for editing prowess
Whether they are snipping an actor's lengthy stare, obliging the viewer to process rapid-fire images or creating tension with a pause, film editors who work in sync with directors play a vital role in giving life to a movie—and its Oscar chances.
"You can't have a good movie with bad editing," Kevin Tent, who is nominated for an Academy Award for his work with director Alexander Payne on best picture contender "The Holdovers," told AFP.
Tent—who has been part of Payne's filmmaking inner circle for nearly 30 years, including on Oscar contenders "The Descendants" (2011) and "Sideways" (2004)—compares his work as an editor to that of a chef making a special dish.
After initial filming, "you're getting all these different elements, and you're chopping things and mixing them" to find the perfect recipe to tell the story, Tent explained.
"If you put too much salt in something, it's no good, or if you put too much sugar, it ruins everything," he quips.