At age 17, Baxter's school gave him the chance to undertake work experience with a local production company,[1] Ross Wood Productions.[2] The company had a range of departments in both production and post-production, allowing Baxter to see how directors, cinematographers, editors, focus pullers, grips and gaffers operated.[3]
Baxter quickly fell in love with the editorial process and dropped out of school to pursue a career.[1]
Baxter was a full-time assistant editor by the age of 18.[4]
Career
Due to a scarcity of work in the Australian film industry, Baxter focused primarily on editing commercials.[4] He was an early adopter of Avid, a non-linear editing software.
Due to his family's Scottish heritage, Baxter was able to secure a British Passport and moved to London at age 23.[4] Baxter worked for the post-production house Final Cut (not to be confused with the software).[2] He soon begin flying to the United States for projects with British directors abroad.[5]
Preferring both the lifestyle and wages, Baxter decided to emigrate to the US after six years in London.[5] He led the newly opened Final Cut offices in New York.[2]
In 2004, Baxter joined Angus Wall's firm Rock Paper Scissors, which specialised in feature film and commercial work.[6] Baxter then worked with Wall as an "additional editor" on David Fincher's film Zodiac. When Wall began to prepare to edit The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, he proposed to Fincher that Baxter be the co-editor.[7]
Baxter refutes that Fincher does "a thousand takes", saying "it is not the same angle getting repeated a thousand times, it is coverage. So there is always somewhere to be in the scene...It’s the volume of angles that really differentiates how information is presented in David’s work."[3]
In 2014, Baxter's edited Gone Girl, his first solo editorial credit with David Fincher. It was the first Hollywood film to be cut entirely in Premiere Pro.[9] Baxter said they chose the software "to bring all the After Effects closer. Shots could be stabilized, have split screens done perfectly, all the editing within scenes of inside monitors. There’s VFX in every couple of shots... It’s about speed and working with the most up to date material immediately. It’s creating the best sort of utopia for a village.”[10]
Typically, Baxter joins the production early, starting to cut after the second or third day of shooting.[12] He starts by treating each scene as a sole entity, a unit he will extensively fine cut even before the whole film is assembled.[11] Baxter likens editing to a headgame, similar to writing.[13]
When working with Fincher, Baxter will initially cut and align dailies as they are positioned in a scene, allowing quick changes between takes and camera angle for every line of dialogue or action.[14] The method allows Fincher to quickly review Baxter's choices for coverage and understand why he has chosen one angle over another for each moment.
Baxter prefers not to visit the set, having stated that his workload and a desire to be at a distance from the shooting process keep him away.[15] The separation helps to keep Baxter's eyes fresh and prevents his editorial choices being biased by what he experiences on set.
When asked if he was a "tech head", Baxter replied that he has "no curiosity in the technology at all. It just allows me to do my work efficiently."[13]