-
The Real Menace of FCP X
The original promise of FCP X was great. Here was an approach that offered us a set of interesting new concepts and consequently some different ways of thinking about editing.
I for one never had an argument with that. Anything that helps us broaden our horizons, adopt a different perspective, see things with fresh eyes, is intrinsically heathy.
What has happened over the years however is that an army of FCP X adherents has driven something altogether opposite. (Not all of them – there are honourable exceptions.)
Instead of FCP X being a means of expanding our options, it has actually led many to narrow them down dramatically.
So far from broadening horizons, FCP X editing has become fossilised around a much narrower set of editing concepts.
In the process there has been a concerted campaign to actively invalidate many existing editing strategies that happen not to be catered for by the FCP X model, precisely because they are not catered for by the FCP X model.
If FCP X doesn’t facilitate it, then it can’t be a strategy worth using.
If an editor advances a stragegy that doesn’t fit perfectly with FCP X, his/her opinion must be dismissed as worthless, the more insultingly the better, regardless of pedigree, as happened the other day (shamefully) with Alan Bell.
FCP X must be seen to be the only possible answer to every editing situation and no rival solution can be allowed to offer anything of any value whatsoever.
Every thread on this forum ends with this same deadening message drowning out every other.
Editing is about adaptability and inventiveness. It’s about asking why you are doing what you are doing and whether you can come up with a better way. It’s about questioning whether the solution you used yesterday can be bettered today, and whether it can be improved upon tomorrow.
But nothing ever needs to be discarded. There is no hierarchy that says a new idea is automatically better than an old one. Everything is possible – all ideas are (potentially) good ideas.
It is about growth, evolution, the endless quest for something that can never be reached. It has no room for certainties.
FCP X has become the opposite of all that.
It has become the thing it always railed against: an obdurate, ossified obstacle to originality.
It has become the enemy of choice.
Instead of ideas, it has given us doctrine. Instead of emancipation, it has given us serfdom.
It is totalitarian and repressive. It has become pernicious. It is not the victim, it is the abuser.
It has also, to my mind, all but killed what was worthwhile in this forum, which at its best has hosted some outstandingly good discussions – conversations that grew out of a shared appreciation of the endlessly fascinating plurality of the world, conversations that are strangled at birth by the tyranny of a single dominant ideology.
Time to join Aindreas. He had the right idea a long time ago.
Simon Ubsdell
tokyo productions
hawaiki