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Chances are if its been compressed for the web in anyway most field information would have been stripped out by the compression system used to create it he web video resulting in progressive or quasi progressive frames.
If you say it was grabbed off a display then it couldn't possibly have proper field information preserved. and who did the screen grab? Did they do it at the correct frame rate?
Best to just live with it as is, or make it the editing format or frame rate. In other words open in QT Pro and see what frame rate it sees it as.
Jack Tunnicliffe
Javapost Production
Sent from my iPhone
On 2012-11-04, at 8:00 PM, Paul Dougherty <lists@postlit.com> wrote:
> I'm trying to work with a YouTube clip for an in-house rip-o-matic that is 23.98. It has the ghosted "combination" frames that I associate with pull-down in a film transfer. (my edit is 29.9) I know little about it provenance except it was a splash or tease video for a PS3 game, grabbed off the display in Europe. It's really great so I'd like to go the extra yard to help it.
>
> I tried to bring it into After Effects and Interpret it- just poke and hope, guessing field dominance and trying both "guess" buttons - but just get a beep an nothing happens. Is there anything else I could try or look into? Thanks in advance.
>
> Paul
> +---End of message---+
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