In The Blink Of An Eye By Walter Murch 🎯 Recommended
Editors who work with Murch recall him asking for “two frames later” or “one frame earlier” not out of perfectionism, but out of respect for the audience’s blink rhythm. In 2025, AI can generate cuts based on action, faces, or dialogue. But AI cannot blink. It cannot feel the unconscious pause between a question and an answer, the hesitation before a kiss, the sharp inhale before bad news.
Here’s a feature-style exploration of Walter Murch’s influential book, In the Blink of an Eye , written as a magazine or blog feature piece. By [Your Name] in the blink of an eye by walter murch
Walter Murch—the legendary film editor and sound designer behind Apocalypse Now , The Godfather Part II , The English Patient , and The Conversation —wrote In the Blink of an Eye as a meditation on a deceptively simple question: Why do cuts work? Editors who work with Murch recall him asking
His solution? Before touching a mouse, watch all your dailies. Take notes. Build a “mental rough cut.” Then edit fast and emotionally, not analytically. “The first cut you make is often the most truthful,” he writes. “Every subsequent version is a negotiation with that truth.” Perhaps the book’s most practical takeaway: Murch’s observation that a cut one frame too early or too late (at 24 fps) can ruin a moment. Why? Because human reaction time to visual change is roughly 1/24th of a second. That’s not a technical limit—it’s a neural one. It cannot feel the unconscious pause between a