[...]being snarky with a smile isn't the way to go about it.
I wasn't being snarky, I was being genuinely friendly. I know that the concept of "friendliness" is apparently alien to the majority of you people here, but believe it or not I actually try to practice it on a fairly regular basis.
That may not have been your intent but that's not how it came across.
For example:
SMILEY REMOVED BY ME
Here's a thought - how about you watch ALL the edits, the completed work, before you make your final judgement? Just an idea.
Remove the smiley and the above statement's tone, from its syntax and diction, becomes quite snarky and a tad bit arrogant. Putting the smiley at the end can be read as putting an "F-U" to some one who took the time to watch and critique, not bash, your edit.
Thanks for checking out the edit and giving it a fair chance. I appreciate the kind words for once; one of the members in another thread said that I was "among friends here," but it doesn't really look that way on this forum. People are way too vindictive! Sheesh...
All work put out for public consumption is subject to criticism along with praise.
My intention in spending the time I did writing up my critique was not to be "vindictive". Nor has anyone else been vindictive. If we were, then we'd have said straight out... "IT SUCKS!" And no one has done that, including myself.
I watched the bits (and have watched more since) and took the time to write up my comments and my reasoning behind them.
Having been through workshops, leading them and participating in them, I've always found a reasoned argument for why something doesn't work to be more valuable than praise.
If you don't know what isn't working and why it isn't, then how can you grow as a writer, film editor, or director?
And, in the end, the product is still yours to do with. Keep that in mind when reading others' opinions. However, if enough people are saying the same things, then it may be worth well to go back and review for yourself.
Sometimes you need distance and perspective to see things. As a friend of mine used to say, "It's hard to see the picture when you are
in the picture."
That can be helped by coming across someone who disagrees with your choices; it forces you to reevaluate and reconsider.
What you are doing is a worthy exercise that will no doubt improve your skills as a film editor.