Richard A. Harris is an American editor and Oscar winner. After graduating from the University of Southern California Film School in 1956, he began to try his hand at film and television, and in 1968 he first appeared as an editor on the science fiction film Bamboo Flying Saucer. Ahead of Richard waited more than forty years career in cinema, during which he collaborated with some of the most famous figures of Hollywood. In particular, he worked on three James Cameron films, two of which were nominated
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Richard A. Harris is an American editor and Oscar winner.
After graduating from the University of Southern California Film School in 1956, he began to try his hand at film and television, and in 1968 he first appeared as an editor on the science fiction film Bamboo Flying Saucer. Ahead of Richard waited more than forty years career in cinema, during which he collaborated with some of the most famous figures of Hollywood.
In particular, he worked on three James Cameron films, two of which were nominated for the Academy Award. And if on the blockbuster “Terminator 2 – Judgment Day” he remained with the nomination, then epic
Titanic I brought him a treasured statuette. The only one of the three films he created with Cameron, where Harris’ work was not noted by academics, was the film True Lies.
He also worked on such films as “The Candidate”, “Toy” (1982), “Intolerable Bears”, “Fletch”, “Island” (1980), “Golden Child”, “Bodyguard”. One of the last in his career was the fantastic detective thriller “The X-Files: I Want to Believe”, released in 2008.