Education
Brigham Young University.
Brigham Young University.
White"s work as an editor on the films directed by Apatow and McKay is unusual because of the importance of the actors" improvisations. Eric Melin"s review of the film Talladega Nights (2006) focuses on this aspect of White"s editing, "the Most Valuable Player of the movie is most definitely editor Brent White. Just as he did with 2004"s Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy, White had to choose the best scenes from hours and hours of wildly different takes to fashion together something with a narrative arc that resembles a movie.
lieutenant can"t be easy work, but he had a little more story to work with than he did in the uneven Anchorman.
Minor continuity errors be damned, Talladega Nights is one funny film." The editing of was described in a feature article by Stephen Rodrick in The New York Times. Rodrick emphasizes the many different versions of the film that were created before deciding on the version that was released, "By the end of last month, when the final edit was done, I had seen five or six versions of Knocked Up.
While the arc of the film remained the same, seemingly every line had been traded in and out.." White received his bachelor"s degree in film production from the Brigham Young University College of Fine Arts and Communications (Brigham Young University) in 1983. He lives in the Los Angeles area.