Hi I had a question does anyone know if you can get that old cinematic looking effect to regular mini DV footage using either after effects or premiere any feedback would be greatly appreciated
There's loads of ways of going about this and also loads of considerations, such as frame rate, de-interlacing, 3:2 pull-down (still not sure about this one - some thing to do with film to video transfers methinks). It's always a biq question when it comes to DV. Some of the most important factors are the type of lens you have (wide-angle or 35mm just look more 'filmish'), lighting (very important) and in general shooting stuff in the style most film-makers use, as opposed to legging it around with a little DV camera.
The most straight-forward way I know to get film degredation is to use DigiEffects CineLook. This adds noise, colour adjustment, dust and scratches and even trapped hair. Instant gratification! All of these are achievable using AE filters etc., but it takes a lot of werk and tweaking. CineLook just requires that you select a preset and tweak some sliders.
Even easier is Apple iMovie which has a QuickTime effect that does it quite well too. I'm not sure if this exists amongst the QT effects in Premiere, but it might.
The creme de la creme at the moment is the Magic Bullet suite which de-interlaces, changes frame rate, grades, degrades and generally does a pretty good job of convincing the eye that it's looking at film.
I'm using the Cinelook plugin for a video I'm working on and for the most part it works fine. However, there is one little problem I'm having with a very thin blue line that periodically appears on the right edge of the screen. I'm certain that it's from the Cinelook plugin because then I deactivate it, the blue line is gone from my renders. I've messed with all the modifications in Cinelook to see how to turn it off but I haven't found anything that works. Has anyone else expericanced this problem? And does anyone know what I can do to correct it?
I'm using Magic Bullet which is working great. The only problem I am having is the final output avi files are incredibly large files. I'm talking about 1 gig per min. I don't quite understand why this is happening. The files going into AE are about one gig for 10 mins. Anyone know what the problem may be?
Chances are, you are outputting uncompresed video from Magic Bullet. Don't know if it can output to the DV Codec, but all you have to do to fix this is re-import the clip into AE and re-render to DV.
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