Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I have a short video clip (mp4) from a security camera. The details of the clip according to Windows Explorer properties are:
Length 00:00:58
Width 1280
Height 720
Data rate 1142 kbps
Total bitrate 1270 kbps
Frame rate 15.02
The file plays just fine on Windows 11 using the default video player, and on an Android phone.
When I import the file into Premiere, the clip is only 41:05 long.
For some buggy reason the file is being cut by ~17 seconds.
In any video player, I can see the very first frame of the video before I hit play (the starting point).
But the first frame in Premiere is NOT the same. Premiere is chopping off 15 seconds from the start of the clip.
The end (last frame) is the same in Premiere and an external video player.
I have already checked the properties of the clip in Premiere and I can see the frame rate is set to "use frame rate from file: 15." I have also tried changing that to "assume frame rate" and manually making it 15. Nothing works. This seems like an obvious bug that has been reported for YEARS all over the internet. I'm guessing if there was something wrong with the file or format, a) it wouldn't play fine everywhere else, and b) it wouldn't play AT ALL in Premiere. Does anyone have any thoughts?
O.k, then i would tried to set the function to Rewrap instead. This rewraps the file and create a new one and during that process odd things gets corrected. I have used that when .mp4 files have had glitches in playback and export from Premiere Pro. When i rewrap the file/s from mp4 to mp4 they plaback and export without issues. Worth trying before transcoding the footage.
...But when I import them to Premiere, total length is 30 mins.
By @JimmyDPhotography
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Frame rate 15.02
By @JimmyDPhotography
Many users are having issues with Variable Frame Rate. Use Handbrake to convert to constant frame rate before importing into Premiere Pro:
https://handbrake.fr/downloads.php
Here is a tutorial:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=34&v=xlvxgVREX-Y
Shutter Encoder may also be used to convert to Constant Frame Rate:
https://www.shutterencoder.com/en/
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@Peru Bob thanks. Looking at Shutter Encoder. What function would I use to set constant frame rate? Everything I choose only shows bitrate adjustments. I don't see frame rate settings anywhere.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Use Conform as the function since you want to conform the frame rate from 15.02 to either 15 fps or 30 fps. I could not find 15 fps but 30 fps will do the trick.
What function would I use to set constant frame rate? Everything I choose only shows bitrate adjustments. I don't see frame rate settings anywhere.
By @JimmyDPhotography
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@Averdahl @Peru Bob thanks but that either made it worse or didn't help LOL. It confomed all the clips to 30 fps, and in Shutter Encode it showed the total length of all the clips combined is 58 mins. But when I import them to Premiere, total length is 30 mins. Not only is this incredibly frustrating, but how many people are exporting movies and going about their happy way never knowing that footage has been cut out of the final video with no indication unless you watch the entire video closely and notice that it suddenly jumps from once frame to some random frame.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
O.k, then i would tried to set the function to Rewrap instead. This rewraps the file and create a new one and during that process odd things gets corrected. I have used that when .mp4 files have had glitches in playback and export from Premiere Pro. When i rewrap the file/s from mp4 to mp4 they plaback and export without issues. Worth trying before transcoding the footage.
...But when I import them to Premiere, total length is 30 mins.
By @JimmyDPhotography
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@Averdahl I think that worked 👍
Copy link to clipboard
Copied