A flatbed editor is a type of machine used to edit film for a motion picture.
Picture and sound rolls load onto separate motorized wheels, called "plates." Each set of plates moves forward or backward separately, or locked together to maintain synchronization between picture and sound. A prism reflects the film image onto a viewing screen, while a magnetic playback head reads the magnetic audio tracks. The two most common configurations are the "six-plate" (one picture transport and two sound transports) and the "eight-plate" (two picture and two sound transport) models. (You can see the edges of two of the plates on the six-plate model pictured at the right.)
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Most films are shot double-system: the picture is shot on film while the sound is recorded separately. For convenience during the editing process, the sound is transferred to a magnetic track ("mag")—sprocketed recording tape, which is filmstock coated with magnetic oxide instead of photo-sensitive emulsion. One "frame" on the mag tap equals one frame of picture. The Mag is usually edge-coded: sequential numbers are stamped on the edge every few frames to facilitate locating particular frames or scenes.
Since picture and sound are usually recorded separately, the editor must synchronize them. The editor loads one picture roll onto a film plate and its corresponding Mag roll onto a sound plate. Then they advance the film to find the frame where the two parts of the Clapperboard came together. The editor repeats the process on the Mag roll to find the frame with the clap sound. Once found, they mark the frame on both rolls as the sync point, and switch the flatbed to Interlock mode. From then on, both picture and sound rolls advance or reverse by exactly the same amount to maintain synch.
When the editor finds a point to cut one shot into another, they mark it on both picture and sound rolls, then make the cut and splice in the next shot.
One of the first and most popular film editing machines was the Moviola. With it, one could manage a thousand-foot eleven-minute 35mm roll. It was difficult to use compared to later machines because it did not have high-speed operation. European flatbeds came into more common use in the United States during the 1970s, although never completely replacing the Moviola.
By the mid-1990s, flatbeds were increasingly replaced by computer-based non-linear systems such as Avid and Lightworks. As of 2007, some film schools still use flatbed editors for their educational value. Feature films in the United States now use electronic non-linear systems almost exclusively.
The two most common brands of flatbed editor, Steenbeck and K.-E.-M. (Keller-Elektro-Mechanik), were invented in Germany in the 1930s. There are also the Italian Prévost, the Dutch Oude Delft or Oldelft, the French Atlas as well as Moritone flatbeds. The U.K. produced the LEM, and America the Moviola flatbed and the exclusively 16mm Showchron of which approximately 400 were produced in 4. 6 or 8 plate configurations, 6 being the most common. (A few 35mm Showchrons were built, but never sold commercially.)
All these machines employ a rotating prism rather than the "Maltese Cross" or geneva drive intermittent mechanism first used by the American upright Moviola. The rotating prism allows the editor to move the film smoothly and continuously, reducing mechanical noise and film wear. It also makes high-speed operation feasible, and some machines can move the film at up to ten times standard speed. The KEM Universal, which has a modular construction, supports up to three picture heads and up to three sound tracks.