The Basics Of Film Editing
April 7 @ 7:45 pm – 10:00 pm
Session led by Peter Leverick
If youâve ever sat in front of a timeline and thought, âI know what I want this scene to do, but itâs not landingâ, this evening is for you. Weâre keeping it simple and practical, a night focused on the basics of film editing and the core decisions that make a sequence feel clear, natural, and emotionally right.
Weâll work through the three questions that sit underneath almost every edit:
When to cut
Sometimes the cut is obvious. Sometimes itâs a tiny moment you canât quite describe, but you can feel it. Weâll explore the cues that tell you itâs time to move on, pace, performance, energy, eye movement, and even breathing.
Why to cut
Cuts arenât just there to shorten things. They shape meaning. They control what the audience notices, what they miss, what they expect, and how they feel. Weâll look at the most common reasons for cutting, to tighten rhythm, to hide problems, to heighten emotion, to build tension, to reveal information at exactly the right time.
What to cut to
This is where the basics of film editing starts to feel like storytelling rather than assembling shots. Weâll look at how choosing the next shot can change the mood of a scene, and how different choices can make the same material feel funny, unsettling, calm, or urgent.
Weâll also look at how the basics of film editing shift depending on genre, because genre is basically a set of audience expectations, and editing is one of the quickest ways to meet those expectations, or deliberately play against them. Weâll talk through a few common genres and the sort of cutting style they tend to lean on:
- Comedy, timing, reaction shots, and how a fraction of a second can make a joke work, or kill it
- Horror, controlling what the audience sees, when they see it, and how cutting can create dread before anything even happens
- Drama, staying with performance, letting moments breathe, and knowing when not to cut
- Suspense, tightening the rope slowly, using pace and withholding information to keep the audience leaning forward
Peter Leverick will also focus on one of the most useful skills an editor develops, knowing whether the cut feels right. Often the editorâs first clue is simply that something feels off. It might be a timing issue, too early, too late, not held long enough, or it might be something else entirely, a mismatch in energy, a performance beat thatâs been cut away, or a moment that needs a different shot to make the scene make sense emotionally. Peter will share ways to spot whatâs actually wrong, so youâre not just nudging clips around at random.
Weâll also cover a couple of common cut types that editors use all the time, including J cuts and L cuts, and why you might use them. Theyâre simple techniques, but theyâre surprisingly powerful for smoothing transitions, pulling the audience into the next moment, and making scenes feel more natural without the edit drawing attention to itself.
This is a hands on learning night in the sense that itâs all about real decision making, the sort of stuff you can immediately apply to your own projects, whether youâre editing on a phone, a laptop, or a full editing suite. If youâre new to editing, itâll give you a foundation. If youâve edited a bit already, itâll help you understand why some sequences work and others donât, even when the footage is decent.
Come along and sharpen up your instincts, get clearer on the basics of film editing, and leave with a few practical ideas you can try the very next time you sit down to edit.
Non-members welcome for the evening (first two nights free as our guests) Here is how to find us
Date: Tuesday 7th April 2026
Time: 7:45 pm â 10:00 pm