
- Posts: 958
- Joined: Fri Nov 03, 2017 7:22 am
Recently I was editing a project for a friend that was shot mostly on the A7S Mark II with a small sequence shot by me with my BMPCC. While color grading though, I noticed that playback performance was abysmal for the BMPCC footage. I had never had problems with BMPCC footage before and disabling grades wasn't helping at all. I had no idea what was happening and it wasn't a disk I/O issue.
Then I noticed that the cars passing in one shot looked really distorted. My first thought was that this happened without my knowledge when I converted the footage to 4:1 compressed in SlimRAW but the footage played back and looked fine in the Media tab. Then I realized that the issue was temporal. I realized that the footage I shot was 24 fps and was placed in a 23.976 timeline and it was being interpolated with optical flow. Changing the retime process to Nearest fixed all playback issues.
This took me hours to figure out and I can imagine a similar issue happening to others so it would probably be wise to either limit optical flow so it doesn't deal with frame rate changes that are far less than one frame difference or to allow people to set a threshold for when optical flow turns on.
Then I noticed that the cars passing in one shot looked really distorted. My first thought was that this happened without my knowledge when I converted the footage to 4:1 compressed in SlimRAW but the footage played back and looked fine in the Media tab. Then I realized that the issue was temporal. I realized that the footage I shot was 24 fps and was placed in a 23.976 timeline and it was being interpolated with optical flow. Changing the retime process to Nearest fixed all playback issues.
This took me hours to figure out and I can imagine a similar issue happening to others so it would probably be wise to either limit optical flow so it doesn't deal with frame rate changes that are far less than one frame difference or to allow people to set a threshold for when optical flow turns on.