Digital Media Net - Your Gateway To Digital media Creation. News and information on Digital Video, VR, Animation, Visual Effects, Mac Based media. Post Production, CAD, Sound and Music

Documentary The Real Yellowstone Completed with DaVinci Resolve Studio

Oliver Peters details his experience using DaVinci Resolve Studio as his principal editing platform.

Fremont, CA, USA – Tuesday, December 9, 2025 – Oliver Peters is an editor and colorist with expertise in commercials, television and feature films. After being tapped by award winning Director and human rights advocate Tom Opre to assist with recuts for his “Killing the Shepherd” documentary, Peters quickly signed on to edit the subsequent two films in Opre’s series, “The Last Keeper” and “The Real Yellowstone.” These films reveal how true conservation begins with respect for the people who live closest to the wildlife.

“‘The Real Yellowstone’ was my third documentary film for Opre but the first using DaVinci Resolve Studio for both offline and online editing. The switch to Resolve came at the urging of the colorist, largely to eliminate relinking issues he’d encountered in the past with other systems,” said Peters. “Up until now, I’ve used DaVinci Resolve Studio for color grading and some minimal editing tied to finishing work, and ‘The Real Yellowstone’ is the first project where I used Resolve as my principal editing application, start to finish.”

“The Real Yellowstone” delves into the lives of ranching families who find themselves at the heart of a complex struggle: rising real estate prices, predator attacks, and a powerful conservation movement that seeks to reshape the landscape they call home.

“It’s an honest look at modern life in the American west, which is quite different from the way it’s presented in TV fiction,” noted Peters. “As a documentary, we tried to give voice to all sides, draw some observations, and raise awareness for ideas that sometimes challenge popular concepts.”

Writing with Picture and Sound

According to Peters, unlike a scripted drama, a documentary also involves curiosity and education. “You learn things you might not have been aware of. As someone who’s never lived in the western states, there are unique issues particular to that region that I learned about. As a film editor, documentaries are more of a vehicle for the editor to tell the story, in effect, writing with picture and sound. Naturally, it’s the director’s story to tell, but the editor has a key role in shaping it in ways that other types of content don’t offer,” he said.

Production spanned two years and incorporated multitudes of content, including events, interviews, and B roll recorded with various formats: professional cameras, smartphones, and drones, as well as some stock footage, stills, and animation. “To keep things simple, I worked in a DCI 4K timeline with all proxy media at the same size and frame rate as the original. No conversions or relinking wizardry would be needed when handing off the project to the colorist,” noted Peters.

While the edit was largely straightforward cuts, dissolves, clip scaling, and tracking, Peters also created all opening titles, lower thirds, and end credits using DaVinci Resolve Studio’s standard text tools. He also handled all music editing and placement for a temporary mix, using DaVinci Resolve Studio’s Fairlight page for basic track processing, such as EQ and compression. “I had built up the score from original music elements provided by Composer Paul Mounsey. It’s better to make clip level adjustments in the edit page, popping over to the Fairlight page to refine each track; for example, a common EQ and compression setting for all dialogue tracks. Same for music,” he said.

“DaVinci Resolve is an all in one tool that easily handles editing, effects, color correction, and audio post. While creative editing was my focus, several additional tools came in handy. Throughout the edit, plenty of resizing was required. I punched in on a lot of 6K footage, and all the still photos required ‘camera moves’ added by me. Both tasks were done within Resolve’s edit page,” Peters added.

Peters benefitted from DaVinci Resolve Studio’s robust feature set when it came to internal reviews. “Although I wasn’t doing final color or the mix, it was still important that the ‘rough cut’ looked and sounded good for whenever Tom presented it to the stakeholders for feedback,” he said. “Throughout much of the offline edit, I worked with proxy footage displayed in Log. For these reviews, I tabbed over to Resolve’s color page for some light color correction to make the film look more polished. The point is to mitigate anything that might take a viewer out of the film, such as sound and color, while reviewing for notes.”

Once the cut was locked, Colorist Matt Hartle of Baked Studios graded the full resolution media in DaVinci Resolve Studio. Assistant Editor Rob Dewbre rendered out the final film as several textless DCI 4K sections, again in Resolve. “These were sent back to me, along with the final mixed audio tracks. I tracked and blurred a few faces in Resolve’s color page as a last touch. From these elements I then assembled the final versions of the documentary,” noted Peters.

“Since we all worked end to end in DaVinci Resolve Studio, the edit and color information exchange was easier than nearly any other offline/online workflow. No XMLs, EDLs, etc. were required, and creative choices, like Ken Burns style moves on photos, translated correctly,” Peters concluded. “Admittedly, at the start, while I was confident in Resolve’s basic abilities, I questioned if it would be up to the task of cutting a full length feature film with tons of media files from a wide range of sources. It turned out to be a very pleasant and successful editing experience.

“At first glance, the breadth of Resolve might seem daunting to new editors, but it’s easy to use. For any editor at any level, Resolve provides an end to end workflow that’s hard to beat.”

For more information about Shepherds of Wildlife Society, founded by Tom Opre, visit: www.shepherdsofwildlife.org

Press Photography

Product photos of DaVinci Resolve Studio and all other Blackmagic Design products are available at www.blackmagicdesign.com/media/images.

About Blackmagic Design

Blackmagic Design creates the world’s highest quality video editing products, digital film cameras, color correctors, video converters, video monitoring, routers, live production switchers, disk recorders, waveform monitors and real time film scanners for the feature film, post production and television broadcast industries. Blackmagic Design’s DeckLink capture cards launched a revolution in quality and affordability in post production, while the company’s Emmy™ award winning DaVinci color correction products have dominated the television and film industry since 1984. Blackmagic Design continues ground breaking innovations including 6G-SDI and 12G-SDI products and stereoscopic 3D and Ultra HD workflows. Founded by world leading post production editors and engineers, Blackmagic Design has offices in the USA, UK, Japan, Singapore and Australia. For more information, please go to www.blackmagicdesign.com

Kerry de Boer

Recent Posts

Now Is Yours: Huawei Rolls Out Mate X7 Alongside a New Lineup of Innovative Products

DUBAI, UAE, Dec. 11, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Huawei unveiled a new lineup of flagship…

2 hours ago

ZEISS celebrates 100 years of advancing innovation in the U.S.

Today, ZEISS marks 100 years of operation in the U.S., helping Americans improve lives and…

2 hours ago

GIBO Announces Development of Initial 30MW + 14,000-GPU AI Data Center, Advancing Malaysia as a Leading Digital AI Hub in Asia-Pacific

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, Dec. 11, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- GIBO Holdings Ltd. (NASDAQ: GIBO) today announced its…

2 hours ago

Van Cliburn International Piano Competition Uses Blackmagic Design

Prestigious event employs Blackmagic Cloud and Blackmagic Ethernet Switch 360P for 21 day broadcast. Fremont, CA,…

3 hours ago

Art Institute of Chicago Produces Digital Content with Blackmagic Design

Museum leverages Blackmagic Design cameras and gear to help visitors connect with artwork. Fremont, CA, USA…

3 hours ago

Professional Wireless Systems (PWS) Provides Comprehensive RF Support For 2025 Latin Grammy Awards in Las Vegas

Industry Leader Delivers Flawless Wireless Coordination and System SupportAcross Multiple Live Productions LAS VEGAS, DECEMBER…

3 hours ago