Role overview
The Film Editor is responsible for shaping structure, rhythm, and continuity across the studio’s moving image work. This role focuses on pacing, timing, and the relationship between images, allowing meaning to emerge through careful sequencing rather than force.
The role requires sensitivity to duration, attention to detail, and patience in refinement. Editing here is approached as a process of listening to the material and responding with restraint.
About the role
As Film Editor, you work closely with the Creative Director, Director of Photography, and production teams to refine projects from assembly through final delivery. You are involved throughout post-production, supporting clarity and coherence at each stage.
The role values dialogue and iteration. Rather than resolving quickly, the editor allows work to evolve through review, adjustment, and considered decision-making.
Key responsibilities
• Shape structure and pacing across film projects
• Collaborate closely with creative and production teams
• Develop edits through iteration and review
• Maintain continuity and narrative clarity
• Refine timing, transitions, and emphasis
• Support final delivery through careful finishing
Required experience
• Demonstrated experience in film editing or post-production
• Strong understanding of rhythm, timing, and narrative flow
• Ability to collaborate and receive feedback with openness
• Comfort working across multiple stages of post-production
• A process-led, detail-oriented approach to editing
Working environment
This role is based on-site within the studio. Editing work is structured around focused sessions, review periods, and dialogue with creative teams. The pace encourages thoughtful refinement rather than rushed resolution.
Compensation and approach
Compensation reflects experience and responsibility. The studio supports long-term collaboration, clear expectations, and working conditions that allow editors to work with attention and care.
Closing note
This role is suited to individuals who see editing as a quiet but decisive practice. If your approach values rhythm, restraint, and patience, this position offers space to shape work with clarity and intent.