How to Edit a Documentary
I’ve been editing a short documentary recently, and thought it
would be fun to share my documentary editing process. I don’t care what editing
software you use. I use Adobe Premiere Pro. I don’t care what camera you shot your documentary on.
We used a 5D Mark IV and Sony A7S ii. All I want to share with you are the
editing steps and we are DAH (Digital
Arts Hub) promoters.
This is just our way of
editing. There are other ways to do most the steps. There are different orders
to do it. But here is our documentary-editing process:
Step 1 – Import
Bring in all of your video footage and audio into your editorial
software. If you have any photos, graphics, or music, bring those in too.
Step 2 – Organize
This is a very important step, especially for bigger projects. I
create Bins (folders) for audio, video,
graphics, sequences, music, photos, and any other major category of assets.
All of the clips go in their respective bin. In the video folder, I create
sub-folders for different scenes or interviews that we shot .
Step 3 – Select
Create sequences for each scene and pull your favorite clips
onto that timeline. For your interview, create a synced sequence with all
cameras and audio synced. Then start cutting it down to the best clips,
duplicating the previously-created sequence with each round of cuts.
Step 4 – Combine
When you have your best interview soundbites in one sequence and
B-roll sequences with all of your best shots, create a new sequence and start
combining everything. This is really where you start to get creative. Match B-roll
to what the interviewee is saying. Move soundbites around to create a great
story. Add photos or other B-roll assets if you have them. I’ll sometimes add
temporary music during this step to get an overall ‘vibe’ of the
documentary while editing.
Step 5 – Cut
Once you have all of your interviews editing with B-roll and
temporary music, start cutting it up. Create a new sequence every time you open
up your project, in case you want to go back to yesterday’s cut for reference
or to undo. The cutting process can take many many rounds. I encourage you to
show your cut to others to get their opinion before finalizing.
Step 6 – Color
After the picture is locked (i.e. the interviews and B-roll
footage are in place), it’s time to color correct and grade your footage. Color
correction is making sure your footage looks natural. Color grading is giving
your video a stylistic look. I use Adobe’s Lumetri Color to do color correction and grading.
Step 7 – Add Final Music & Graphics
After you color, it’s time to add music and graphics. If you are
having an original score done for your documentary, you’ll want the picture
locked so that they can create the score based off your cuts. Note: If
you aren’t having an original score done, it might be better to add music
during the cut step so that you can cut your video to the
music. Step 7 is also when you add final graphics. I like adding graphics after
color correction because the color of titles and other overlay graphics might
change depending on the color correction and grading.
Step 8 – Perfect
Now you have everything together. Make sure your audio is
leveled properly for both music and interviews/voice over. Double check that your color looks great.
Step 9 – Export
Once everything is as perfect as can be, it’s time to export.
How you export depends on how you will be distributing your documentary. If you
are just showing it online, I usually export a high quality H.264 file. For
showing at film festivals and other screenings, you might have to export
differently. Talk to the festival to find out what their specs are. We use
Adobe Media Encoder for exporting.
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