PODCAST| Chiara Nicoletti interviews Midge Costin, director of the film Making Waves: the Art of Cinematic Sound.
Director Midge Costin has been a Hollywood sound editor for over two decades and in Cannes Classics at the 72nd Festival de Cannes she brings the audience’s attention on the hidden power of sound design with Making Waves: the Art of Cinematic Sound, a documentary on the secrets of this field with interviews to famous directors like George Lucas, David Lynch, Steven Spielberg, Robert Redford and Ang Lee. Midge Costin explains the origins lf the film and the structure she used to highlight the importance of the sound art in cinema. The director comments on whole streaming platform VS cinema theatre’s hot topic and surprisingly enough, underlines how the sound department has not been affected by this change in a film’s fruition.
Making Waves: the Art of Cinematic Sound reveals the hidden power of sound in cinema – and our lives. Through film clips, interviews and verité footage, the film captures the history, impact and creative process of this overlooked art form through the insights and stories of legendary directors such as George Lucas, Steven Spielberg, David Lynch, Barbra Streisand, Ang Lee, Christopher Nolan, Sofia Coppola and Ryan Coogler, and the sound men and women with whom they collaborate. Few have “ears to hear” or comprehend the emotional storytelling impact sound plays in so- called visual media. Francis Ford Coppola and George Lucas have both declared that “sound is 50% of the movie” with Spielberg saying “our ears lead our eyes to where the story lives.” In Making Waves, we see and hear from the key players of sound design – including multi-Oscar winners Walter Murch (Apocalypse Now), Ben Burtt (Star Wars) and Gary Rydstrom (Saving Private Ryan) – who, in pursuing their art and desire to push the medium, are the very people who will go down in the history of cinema as developing sound into the immersive storytelling force it is today. Audiences will discover many unsung collaborators for the key creative artists they are, in a domain that has for too long been characterized as “technical.”
To discover more about the film, click here.