Zene Baker

Zene Baker (/ˈzn/ ZEEN) is an American film editor. A native of Raleigh, North Carolina, Baker is a 1998 graduate of The North Carolina School of the Arts where he received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in film editing.[1] Baker is best known as the editor of the Seth Rogen's films Observe and Report, 50/50, This Is the End, Neighbors, The Interview, The Night Before and Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising

Zene Baker
OccupationFilm editor
Years active1998–present

In addition, Baker also edited Seeking a Friend for the End of the World.[2] He is represented by the UTA Agency.

Filmography

Year Film Director Other notes
2000 George Washington David Gordon Green with Steven Gonzales
2002 Civil Brand Neema Barnette
2003 All the Real Girls David Gordon Green with Steven Gonzales
2004 Undertow David Gordon Green with Steven Gonzales
2006 The Foot Fist Way Jody Hill
2007 Shanghai Kiss Kern Konwiser & David Ren
Ping Pong Playa Jessica Yu
The Babysitters David Ross
2008 The Haunting of Molly Hartley Mickey Liddell
2009 Brief Interviews with Hideous Men John Krasinski
Observe and Report Jody Hill
Greek (TV series) Several 3 episodes
2010 Yeardley Heath C. Michaels
2011 50/50 Jonathan Levine
2012 Seeking a Friend for the End of the World Lorene Scafaria
Five Jennifer Aniston, Patty Jenkins, Alicia Keys, and Demi Moore TV movie
2013 This Is the End Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg
2014 Neighbors Nicholas Stoller
The Interview Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg
2015 The Night Before Jonathan Levine
2016 Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising Nicholas Stoller
2017 Snatched Jonathan Levine with Melissa Bretherton
2017 Thor: Ragnarok Taika Waititi with Joel Negron
2019 Men in Black: International F. Gary Gray with Christian Wagner
2021 WandaVision Matt Shakman Filming
gollark: It's less complex for them as the code is already there and written with a nice API, and "less efficient" how? Slightly more space on headers?
gollark: You could easily store the directory entry bits as an SQLite table.
gollark: This is an excellent use case for SQLite, which would allow quick lookups in the metadata bit and not require coming up with a fiddly custom binary format.
gollark: As you can see from the file format docs (https://wiki.openzim.org/wiki/ZIM_file_format), it's basically big compressed blobs plus directory entry metadata and stuff.
gollark: It's designed for offline viewing of wiki/web content.

References

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