Stephen Mirrione
Stephen Mirrione | |
---|---|
Born | Santa Clara County, California, United States | February 17, 1969
Occupation | Film editor |
Stephen Mirrione (born February 17, 1969) is an American film editor. He won an Academy Award for his editing of the film Traffic (2000).
Life and career[]
Mirrione was born in Santa Clara County, California. He attended Bellarmine College Preparatory and then the University of California, Santa Cruz, from which he received his bachelor's degree in 1991.[1] He moved to Los Angeles, and began a collaboration with Doug Liman, who was then a graduate student at the University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts. Mirrione edited Liman's first feature films Getting In (1994), Swingers (1996), and Go (1999), which was an homage to Akira Kurosawa's 1950 film Rashomon.[2]
Mirrione has had a notable collaboration with director Steven Soderbergh. The two met when Soderbergh attended the opening of Go. About one year later he asked Mirrione to edit Traffic (2000),[2] which earned Mirrione an Oscar. Todd McCarthy characterized the effects of the camerawork and editing, "Soderbergh has given the film tremendous texture as well as a vibrant immediacy through constant handheld operating, mostly using available light, and manipulating the look both in shooting and in the lab. Stephen Mirrione's editing, which gives Traffic a beautifully modulated overall shape, is characterized on a moment-to-moment basis by jump cuts and jagged rhythms. Overall result is far too stylized to call the approach verite, but pic looks far more caught-on-the-run, and therefore far less staged, than all but a few other American films."[3]
Mirrione subsequently edited all three of the Ocean's films directed by Soderbergh and starring George Clooney (Ocean's Eleven (2001), Ocean's Twelve (2004), and Ocean's Thirteen (2007)), as well as Soderbergh's 2009 film The Informant! and the 2011 film Contagion.
Mirrione won an American Cinema Editors "Eddie" Award in 2006 for his editing of Alejandro González Iñárritu's film Babel, for which he was also nominated for an Academy Award. He has been nominated four times for BAFTA Awards for editing Traffic, 21 grams (also directed by Inarritu – 2003), Good Night, and Good Luck (directed by George Clooney-2006), and for Babel.
Mirrione has been selected for membership in the American Cinema Editors.[4]
Selected filmography[]
Academy Awards and Nominations[]
- 2000 – Traffic (won) Academy Award Film Editing
- 2006 – Babel (nominated) Academy Award Film Editing
- 2015 – The Revenant (nominated) Academy Award Film Editing
see: Academy Award for Best Film Editing
Other Awards and Nominations[]
- 2000 – Traffic (nominated) BAFTA Film Award Best Editing
- 2000 – Traffic (nominated) American Cinema Editors ACE Eddie Best Edited Feature Film – Dramatic
- 2002 – Thirteen Conversations About One Thing (won) San Diego Film Critics Society SDFCS Award Best Editing
- 2003 – 21 Grams (nominated) BAFTA Film Award Best Editing
- 2005 – Good Night, and Good Luck (nominated) BAFTA Film Award Best Editing
- 2005 – Good Night, and Good Luck (nominated) American Cinema Editors ACE Eddie Best Edited Feature Film – Dramatic
- 2006 – Babel (won) Cannes Film Festival Vulcain Prize – Awarded to a technical artist by the C.S.T.[5]
- 2006 – Babel (nominated) BAFTA Film Award Best Editing
- 2006 – Babel (won) American Cinema Editors ACE Eddie Best Edited Feature Film – Dramatic
- 2010 – Biutiful (nominated) 25th Goya Awards Best Editing
- 2013 – August: Osage County (nominated) American Cinema Editors ACE Eddie Best Edited Feature Film – Comedy or Musical
- 2014 – Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (nominated) BAFTA Film Award Best Editing
- 2014 – Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (nominated) American Cinema Editors ACE Eddie Best Edited Feature Film – Comedy or Musical
- 2015 – The Revenant (nominated) BAFTA Film Award Best Editing
- 2015 – The Revenant (nominated) American Cinema Editors ACE Eddie Best Edited Feature Film – Dramatic
References[]
- ^ Bellarmine College Preparatory Connections, Fall 2005 issue. Online version retrieved Jan. 8, 2008.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Newman, John (2001). "Academy Award winner and former UCSC student Stephen Mirrione returns to campus," Archived 2008-07-24 at the Wayback Machine UC Santa Cruz Currents, May 28, 2001. Online version retrieved Jan. 7, 2008.
- ^ McCarthy, Todd (2000). "Traffic", Variety Dec. 12, 2000; online version retrieved 2008-07-13
- ^ "American Cinema Editors – Members". American Cinema Editors. Archived from the original on 2008-01-15.
- ^ "Festival de Cannes: Babel". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-12-13.
External links[]
- American film editors
- 1969 births
- Living people
- University of California, Santa Cruz alumni
- Best Film Editing Academy Award winners
- American Cinema Editors
- People from Santa Clara County, California
- USC School of Cinematic Arts alumni