logo
The genius behind the sound of The Godfather and Apocalypse Now

The genius behind the sound of The Godfather and Apocalypse Now

Times06-05-2025
Shut your eyes at the movies and what do you hear? The whop-whop-whop of choppers at the start of Apocalypse Now? The mosquito that bedevils Barton Fink in his hotel room like a Stuka bomber? The piercing, metal scream from an overhead train that Michael Corleone hears before he murders Sollozzo and McCluskey in a Bronx restaurant in The Godfather? If so then you are enjoying the work of Walter Murch, the three-time Oscar-winning editor and sound designer.
A rakish man with jug ears (of course Hollywood's most famous sound man has the ears of Mickey Mouse), Murch was nicknamed 'Walter Boing-Boing' as a boy because he would often talk in sound effects, like his favourite cartoon character. Unusually he works as a film editor and sound designer — jobs not generally performed by the same person — and it has bequeathed a rich and celebrated career, which he has mined in a series of intelligent, erudite and inquisitive books.
The oblique, unnoticed aspect of sound is what makes it the stealth art. If you had to boil down Murch's philosophy to one statement it would be this: 'If you leave certain things incomplete, to just the right degree, most of the audience will complete those ideas for you. The artistry in every department is to know what can be left out.'
For the 1999 film The Talented Mr Ripley Murch and the director Anthony Minghella opted not to show the film's climactic murder, instead relaying the sound of it while we observe Ripley's face reflected in the mirror door of his closet. For The Godfather a cork popping anticipates a gunshot. After 175 tracks of five-speaker surround sound in Apocalypse Now, the compound of Kurtz is noticeable for its eerie silence.
There's more than a touch of the Vulcan intellectual to Murch. At a drinks party he is the man next to the punch bowl talking about his theories about 'squishy ping-pong balls of air', or Shakespearean iambic pentameter as a rhythmic model for knowing where an editor should make a cut in a scene.
It takes a special type of person to willingly confine themselves to a tiny room where they watch and listen to the same thing over and over again. 'This textbook definition of brainwashing pretty accurately describes the daily experience of a film editor,' Murch writes near the end of his new book, Suddenly Something Clicked, a mosaic of observations on his career.
Released from the self-imposed prison of the editing booth, Murch bursts with intelligent chatter, mixing reminiscence and practical tips with metaphysics and neuroscience. Over the course of the book the art of editing is compared to grafting trees, translating books, being part of a jazz quintet, conducting an orchestra, changing gears in a car, bowing a violin, brain surgery, taking off in an aircraft and building a Lego model.
Such limber, left-field thinking is presumably a boon in the editing booth, where images flare with unseen resonance when placed next to one another, and sounds strike chords several scenes distant. Murch points out that we hear before we see: four and a half months after conception we are alive to the song of our mother's voice, the swash of her breathing, the timpani of her heart, long before we can see a thing.
It's perhaps an early example of acousmêtre — a narrative device by which a character is introduced solely through their voice, like the Wizard of Oz or Colonel Kurtz, although we should be lucky he wasn't called 'Colonel Leighley', which is what Marlon Brando insisted his character be called throughout the shooting, before finally reading the book and being persuaded that Kurtz was the way to go. Murch had to overdub all the scenes where his character was mentioned. The horror, the horror.
Much of this material has appeared before. The Leighley-not-Kurtz story, along with an account of Murch's pioneering use of quintaphonic sound on Apocalypse Now — now standard, but then revolutionary, allowing the audience to hear the helicopters go round in circles — came up in The Conversations, Michael Ondaatje's book of interviews with Murch. Readers of that book will already know why Murch stands, like a short-order cook, while editing (increased blood flood to the brain), or why we are blind for the 120ms required to move our eyeballs, a fact of great use to magicians, masters of the three-card monte and film editors. With sprocketed celluloid — the film with the familiar perforations on either side — you spend half of a two-hour movie in darkness, a fact obscured by the brain's Ram cache, which helpfully fills in the missing parts.
At one point in the new book Murch points out that the shooting ratio of Apocalypse Now — that is, the ratio of shot footage to used footage — was 95:1. For Mad Max: Fury Road (not one of his) it was an astonishing 240:1. Murch's literary ratio, at this point in his career, is closer to Hitchcock's economical 3:1. Every inch of the bison has been used at one point or another.
Readers new to Murch will still want to start with The Conversations, his and Ondaatje's magisterial deep dive into the braiding of intellect, intuition and emotion that informs the editor's art. Suddenly Something Clicked is more like the director's cut of that book and Murch's In the Blink of an Eye is a prismatic reordering of material that delights the superfan not the newbie.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hunky Hollyoaks star 'signs up to celebrity dating app Raya as he returns to the UK to find love'
Hunky Hollyoaks star 'signs up to celebrity dating app Raya as he returns to the UK to find love'

Daily Mail​

time16 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Hunky Hollyoaks star 'signs up to celebrity dating app Raya as he returns to the UK to find love'

Ricky Whittle has reportedly returned to London and is reportedly looking for love as he signed up to celebrity dating app Raya. The ex-Hollyoaks star, who finished runner up on Strictly Come Dancing in 2009, moved to Los Angeles to work in Hollywood in 2011. According to The Sun, one picture showed the actor cuddling a quokka and another of him running shirtless through a street. A source said: 'It's like he's saying I'm cuddly, hot and very available. 'His profile popped up a couple of weeks ago. It says he's an actor who lives in LA but was visiting London. 'Given how good he looks, I bet he had loads of people swiping on his profile.' Ricky is best known over here for playing Calvin Valentine on Hollyoaks. After his character was killed off in 2010, Ricky relocated moved and has starred in shows including The 100 and American Gods. Despite all of his success across the pond, during his interview with MailOnline in 2023 Ricky did not completely rule out a possible return to the British soap one day. He said: 'Would I ever do a soap again? Probably not, but for fun why not, I don't care as I'm in a fortunate position, where I don't need to work. 'I haven't been in Hollyoaks for 20 years but at the end of the day you can never shy away from where you came from.' He also opened up about the influence his time on Hollyoaks had on his acting skills, saying: 'If it wasn't for Hollyoaks I wouldn't be where I am now. 'Hollyoaks is an education, you're learning 12 to 15 scripts every day and halfway through a day, new pages are coming down and it's like "learn them now" and you just get it done and don't think about'. 'My character went from being the good guy, to the bad guy to the club owner, to the policeman, to your sister's on drugs, to you'd killed someone and then he's back to life - it's like you go through a whole gambit of emotions'. 'If that's not great education for an actor- I don't know what is.' He added: 'I would never look down on soap actors because they're the ones that are putting in five days a week and I've got nothing but love for those guys and what that show did for me.' He turned his back on Hollywood in 2023, telling MailOnline he was 'done' with America and its 'crazy politics' and was planning to move away from Los Angeles. But just a couple of years later it seems Ricky may be considering a return to the big time as the hunky actor made a surprise appearance at the Monte-Carlo Television Festival earlier this year. He arrived on the red carpet in southern France looking typically dapper in a black tux ahead of his role presenting the festival's Golden Nymph Awards Ceremony alongside Shy'm, 39. The duo posed for photos together, with Ricky playfully making sure the spotlight was on the French actress as she put on a leggy display in an eye-catching black and white dress. Later in the evening the pair suffered an unfortunate wardrobe malfunction while performing a dance routine on-stage as Shy'm spilled out her outfit momentarily. Whittle was last seen on television while playing Mickey Barnes in one episode of The Rookie, a show following a police officer in Los Angeles. Prior to that the 45-year-old had enjoyed a quiet couple of years work-wise after the end of American Gods in 2021.

Mandy Moore's This is Us co-star Chrissy Metz shares update after 'life-altering' house fire
Mandy Moore's This is Us co-star Chrissy Metz shares update after 'life-altering' house fire

Daily Mail​

time18 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Mandy Moore's This is Us co-star Chrissy Metz shares update after 'life-altering' house fire

This is Us star Chrissy Metz offered an update on how her friend and co-star Mandy Moore is doing after losing her home in the deadly Los Angeles fires in January. Metz, 44, who revealed she has lost 100 pounds, told Extra that Moore and her family were 'doing well,' as they try to rebuild their lives. Moore, 43, lost her house in the Eaton fire, in east Los Angeles county. 'A lot of the structure was able to be salvaged, which is great, but it's so jarring,' Metz told the outlet. 'It's so life-altering, and she has children and pets. It's just frightening because there's nothing you can do but hopefully get out of there.' Moore shared the house with her husband Taylor Goldsmith and their three kids; sons Gus, four, and Ozzie, two and daughter Lou, 10 months. .Mandy Moore, 41, and her family are 'doing well' after losing their homes in the deadly LA fires in January according to her former co-star Chrissy Metz, 43 Metz's latest project is focused around another deadly California fire that ravaged the small mountain town of Paradise, CA in 2018. She plays the title character in Faith in the Flames: The Nichole Jolly Story. The Emmy nominee said she was hesitant to sign on for the project at first. 'I love a true story, and I love a heroic true story,' she said. 'However, there was fire involved, and I was like, "I don't know if I'm the girl for the job… Maybe I can't do it, like, physically and mentally, emotionally,"' adding, 'It's a lot. And it's real fire.' Talking to the real Nichole Jolly seemed to help steady Metz's nerves. 'We talked for a couple of hours. I asked her so many questions. I just don't understand how her brain worked,' she explained. 'I was like, I don't think I could do it, you know? Like, I get overwhelmed if I wake up late.' Jolly responded by telling her, 'I just took one step after another and then you help every single person you can.' Faith in the Flames: The Nichole Jolly Story debuted on Lifetime July 19. As for keeping up with her This Is Us co-stars, Metz relayed that they are in constant contact with each other. 'We all are texting each other. I always text when any projects come out or Sterling with his nominations for Paradise.' Brown received his 10th Emmy nomination for his role as a secret service agent investigating the murder of the president after an environmental catastrophe. If he wins it will be his third Emmy following wins in 2016 for American Crime Story and in 2017 for This is Us.

I moved to the UK because of Trump, Ellen DeGeneres says
I moved to the UK because of Trump, Ellen DeGeneres says

Telegraph

time18 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

I moved to the UK because of Trump, Ellen DeGeneres says

Ellen DeGeneres has revealed she relocated to the UK because Donald Trump won the 2024 presidential election. The comedian and presenter, 67, relocated from California to the Cotswolds with her wife Portia de Rossi, 52, in November. While there had been speculation the move was in response to Mr Trump's re-election, it is the first time the star has publicly confirmed the motivation behind the change. Asked whether reports that she moved because of Mr Trump were correct, DeGeneres said 'yes'. Speaking to Richard Bacon in Cheltenham on Sunday, DeGeneres said she and her wife had bought a 'part-time house' and had intended to spend up to four months a year in the UK, but that changed following the election. 'We got here the day before the election and woke up to lots of texts from our friends with crying emojis, and I was like, 'He got in',' she said, the BBC reported. She added: 'And we're like, 'We're staying here'.' A string of left-wing stars have fled the US following Mr Trump's re-election. Courtney Love, who has lived in the UK for several years, said she had applied to become a British citizen in light of Mr Trump's presidency. Actress Rosie O'Donnell left America for Ireland saying she will consider returning 'when it is safe for all citizens to have equal rights there'. Last week Mr Trump threatened to s trip the actress and comedian of her American citizenship, labelling her a 'threat to humanity' after she criticised his response to the Texas floods. Speaking on Sunday, DeGeneres said life 'is just better' in the UK and she and her wife were considering getting remarried amid ongoing concerns gay marriage is under threat in the US. 'It's absolutely beautiful,' DeGeneres said of the UK. 'We're just not used to seeing this kind of beauty. The villages and the towns and the architecture - everything you see is charming and it's just a simpler way of life. 'It's clean. Everything here is just better - the way animals are treated, people are polite. I just love it here. 'We moved here in November, which was not the ideal time, but I saw snow for the first time in my life. We love it here. Portia flew her horses here, and I have chickens, and we had sheep for about two weeks.' DeGeneres, who came out as gay in 1997, said some stars have not come out about their sexuality because 'it's still a problem' and 'people are still scared.' The star also spoke of the Southern Baptist Convention endorsing the reversal of a Supreme Court case allowing same-sex marriage. 'The Baptist Church in America is trying to reverse gay marriage,' she said. 'They're trying to literally stop it from happening in the future and possibly reverse it. Portia and I are already looking into it, and if they do that, we're going to get married here.' She added: 'I wish we were at a place where it was not scary for people to be who they are. I wish that we lived in a society where everybody could accept other people and their differences. 'So until we're there, I think there's a hard place to say we have huge progress.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store