Some do, but it's rare. Woody Allen did a lot of editing for the movie Zelig, and Hayao Miyazake has been involved at every level for most of his movies. YOu can choose from any of the following reasons why this practice is not more common: (1) By the time the movie is ready for editing, the director has moved on to another project (2) There may be some union rules that prevent this practice (3) The editor is more skillful at editing than the director (4) The editor handles the largely technical task of editing, but the director might provide input on how certain scenes could be edited differently (5) The producer decides where directing ends and editing begins.
record or take picures with your legos then go to windows movie maker and add 3d effect and edit your video
movie trailors always look great, promote your films well, and are awesome and make you run to theater, but they are not usually mixed or designed by a person who signed up JUST to edit the promo. If you are good at making them, you might ant to join a team of editors who work on a movie, because normally they mix it together.
Well, windows movie maker can definitely properly cut and edit films. They also offer many functions and features that are easy to understand by the user.
Hugh Baddeley has written: 'How to make holiday films' 'How to edit amateur films.'
H. Baddeley has written: 'How to edit amateur films'
Goldeneye, Goldfinger, and .... (edit)
You can't edit the movie (video) but you can import it and split it up for editing if you like.
The UNIHD website says films are unedited.
No. You can't re-edit the finished project file. You can import it and edit it by splitting, etc., but you can't re-edit it as a project file. Not in any version of the program.
You cannot legally re-edit films. That would violate copyright law.
Magix Movie Edit Pro 15.0 Plus and Vegas Movie Studio 9 are two programs you can use to easily use and learn to edit movies.
You should be able to import and edit Kodak Playsport videos in Magix Movie Edit Pro if the file formats are compatible with Magix Movie Edit Pro. Have you tried importing a video? If not, try it. If the file format is not compatible, then you will need to convert it to a format (file name extension) used by Magix Movie Edit Pro before importation. I don't have my Movie Magix manual handy to tell you the extensions that are compatible, but what you can do is check yours (if you have the manual). If you don't have the program documentation, go online and do a search for compatible formats.