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  1. Lou Lombardo (February 15, 1932 – May 8, 2002) was an American filmmaker whose editing of the 1969 film The Wild Bunch has been called "seminal". In all, Lombardo is credited on more than twenty-five feature films.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0518470Lou Lombardo - IMDb

    Lou Lombardo was born on 15 February 1932 in Missouri, USA. He was an editor and producer, known for The Wild Bunch (1969), Moonstruck (1987) and The Long Goodbye (1973). He died on 8 May 2002 in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA.

    • Editor, Editorial Department, Producer
    • February 15, 1932
    • Lou Lombardo
    • May 8, 2002
  3. The film was edited by the master Lou Lombardo, the man who came to prominence after editing Sam Peckinpah’s The Wild Bunch a couple of years earlier.

    • Lou Lombardo (filmmaker)1
    • Lou Lombardo (filmmaker)2
    • Lou Lombardo (filmmaker)3
    • Lou Lombardo (filmmaker)4
    • Lou Lombardo (filmmaker)5
  4. Aug 8, 2014 · Perhaps the biggest unsung hero of The Wild Bunch is a man who neither called ‘action’ nor appeared on screen. Lou Lombardo edited the film with Peckinpah and broke a record on the way: some 3,643 shot to shot edits were used in the film’s final cut, more than any other colour film up to that point.

  5. Lou Lombardo (February 15, 1932 – May 8, 2002) was an American filmmaker whose editing of the 1969 film The Wild Bunch has been called seminal. In all, Lombardo is credited on more than twenty-five feature films.

  6. Feb 21, 2018 · Inspired by Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai (1954), Peckinpah and editor Lou Lombardo spent a year perfecting the rhythms of the cutting and sound mixing, achieving giddy new heights in elasticated time, stretched moments, the long split-second.

  7. Jul 11, 2002 · Lou Lombardo, film editor whose credits include “The Wild Bunch,” “The Long Goodbye” and “Moonstruck,” died May 8 at the Motion Picture and Television Fund in Woodland Hills. He was 70.