Billy Weber
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Billy Weber is an American film editor with more than twenty film credits dating from Days of Heaven (1978).
One of Weber's first editing roles was as associate editor (as William Weber) on Terrence Malick's first feature as a director, Badlands (1973). Badlands was edited by Robert Estrin; Weber edited Malick's next film Days of Heaven (1978). When Malick returned to film directing twenty years later with The Thin Red Line (1998); he once again hired Weber to edit it, along with Leslie Jones and Saar Klein. While Weber did not edit Malick's next film The New World, he was an associate producer on the project. Most recently, Weber was one of five collaborating editors on Malick's fifth feature, The Tree of Life (2011).
Beyond this notable collaboration with Malick, Weber has edited Beverly Hills Cop (directed by Martin Brest, 1984), Top Gun (Tony Scott, 1986) and Midnight Run (Brest, 1988).
Weber was nominated for the Academy Award for Film Editing for Top Gun; he was nominated again for an Academy Award, as well as for an ACE Eddie Award and the Satellite Award, for The Thin Red Line.
Weber has directed one movie, Josh and S.A.M. (1993), that was produced by Martin Brest.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Billy Weber, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia
Acting
Crew
Movie
Taxi Driver
Assistant Editor
1976
Movie
Top Gun
Editor
1986
Movie
Jack Reacher: Never Go Back
Editor
2016
Movie
The Predator
Editor
2018
Movie
Beverly Hills Cop
Editor
1984
Movie
Miss Congeniality
Editor
2000
Movie
The Tree of Life
Editor
2011
Movie
The Thin Red Line
Editor
1998
Movie
Beverly Hills Cop II
Editor
1987
Movie
Shanghai Noon
Additional Editing
2000
Movie
The Warriors
Editor
1979
Movie
Nacho Libre
Editor
2006