Joe Walker (film editor)
Joe Walker is a British film editor who has worked in both England and Los Angeles. In 2022, he won the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for his work on Dune, having been nominated twice before for 12 Years a Slave and Arrival. For the American Cinema Editors Award for Best Edited Feature Film – Dramatic he has received a string of five nominations over eight years and in 2016[1] he won, for Arrival.[2] He took the European Film Award for Best Editor for Shame in 2012[3] and Satellite Award for Best Editing for Sicario in 2016.
Joe Walker
Early life[edit]
Walker grew up in the West London Borough of Ealing. Raised Catholic, his father was a History master, while his mother was one of Winston Churchill's wartime short-hand typists.[4]
Walker initially trained as a classical composer. In 1984, he received his B.A. degree in music at the University of York.[5] Walker learned editing in the BBC's Film Department at Ealing Studios.[6][7]
Career[edit]
Walker started as a Sound Editor, coaxing animal impersonator Percy Edwards out of retirement to provide gorilla noises for Philip Saville's series First Born (1988), his first collaboration with composer Hans Zimmer. After his first forays as a Film Editor, cutting classical music documentaries for the BBC, Walker broke into editing drama with Julian Farino's Out of the Blue and comedy with two series of David Renwick's Jonathan Creek.
Walker has had two notable partnerships with major directors: Steve McQueen and Denis Villeneuve.
His first collaboration with McQueen, Hunger (2008), was a portrayal of the IRA hunger strikes at Long Kesh starring Michael Fassbender as Bobby Sands. It won the Caméra d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival.[8] Joining again the team of McQueen, Fassbender and cinematographer Sean Bobbitt, Walker cut Shame (2011). This told the story of a successful Manhattanite navigating the terrain of sexual obsession on a path towards self-destruction. Their third collaboration was 12 Years a Slave (2013), the true story of Solomon Northup, a free man kidnapped and sold into slavery, set in 1840s Louisiana. It stars Chiwetel Ejiofor, Brad Pitt, Michael Fassbender, Lupita Nyong'o, Sarah Paulson, Paul Dano, and Paul Giamatti. 12 Years a Slave (2013) won three Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Supporting Actress for Nyong'o, and Best Adapted Screenplay for John Ridley. In her acceptance speech, Nyong'o paid tribute to Walker, describing him as "the invisible performer in the editing room".[9] The film was awarded the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama, and the British Academy of Film and Television Arts recognized it with the Best Film and Best Actor for Ejiofor.
Walker's partnership with Denis Villeneuve has comprised five feature films. Their first, Sicario, is a 2015 American crime-thriller drama film starring Benicio del Toro and Josh Brolin in which an idealistic FBI agent Emily Blunt is enlisted in a secret CIA op to bring down the head of a brutal Mexican drug cartel. Arrival is a 2016 American psychological science fiction film based on the 1998 short story "Story of Your Life" by Ted Chiang starring Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner, and Forest Whitaker. Villeneuve said of the movie's creation, "Each film has its hero. For this one, the editor Joe Walker is mine. Arrival was by far the hardest film to edit. Christ, we worked hard!".[10] Their third collaboration is Blade Runner 2049, the sequel to Blade Runner (1982). They next partnered on Dune (2021), based on Frank Herbert's novel of the same name.[11] A fifth collaboration Dune: Part Two, was released on March 1, 2024.
Walker has talked about time being the editor's "greatest superpower".[12] His films with McQueen and Villeneuve showcase experiments with cross-cutting, flashback structures and time loops.[13][14] McQueen paid tribute to Walker's ability to find the rhythm of a film, saying: "A great film editor is attuned to the silences. They can be just as valuable as the words. It's all about timing. And that's what he has – Joe has time."[15]
In 2010, Walker cut the documentary-feature Life in a Day for Academy Award-winning director Kevin Macdonald and producer Ridley Scott. It was filmed by YouTube users around the world on a single day in July 2010 and is distilled from the 4,500 hours of footage submitted. The movie premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2011.[16][17]
Walker has edited many British Indie features such as The Escapist (2008) written and directed by Rupert Wyatt; Harry Brown (2009), starring Michael Caine as a modern-day vigilante; and Brighton Rock (2010), a reworking of the Graham Greene classic that set the action against a backdrop of the Mod and Rocker riots of 1964.
Walker has cut many British TV programs: Jimmy McGovern's The Lakes; Eroica for the BBC; ITV blockbuster Doctor Zhivago starring Sam Neill and Keira Knightley; Sword of Honour for Channel 4, starring Daniel Craig; The Devil's Whore, for director Marc Munden and Tommy Tiernan for director Richard Ayoade.
In addition to editing, Walker's music has been played by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, live in Trafalgar Square.[18] He wrote the score for the BBC/HBO drama Dirty War.[19] In January 2019, Joe was awarded an honorary doctorate by his alma mater University of York.[20]