Exported files pixelate

Movie 10 Export pixelates randomly for 1-2 seconds at a time

When I export files in 540p and then play the files, it randomly pixelates on the screen for about a second every minute or two. Screenshots attached - the first two are the issue, the third is what it looks like the rest of the time. It looks like the same effect as when you fast forward a VCR.


How do I fix/prevent this? It's really annoying and people are starting to complain.


The files are usually 7-10 minutes exported, and I import from a 90 minute show on a Canon HG20. The files look fine in preview, so it's not a camera issue or import issue.


I have the latest iMovie 10 and use a 2017 Macbook Pro, but have also tried doing it on my older iMac 2009, same issues on both. Using Sierra OS on both as I've heard bad things about High Sierra.


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iMovie (iOS), macOS Sierra (10.12.6)

Posted on Feb 8, 2018 10:47 AM

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Posted on Feb 26, 2018 7:43 AM

So, as I understand you, your HG20 is not a supported camera. Per my earlier post, that may be the cause of the problem.


In Finder, try control-clicking on the AVCHD folder and then click on Show Package Contents. In the package contents, in one of the folders, will be the MTS files that are the actual movie files. The MTS files are what need to be converted to an iMovie supported format. Option-drag (Copy, not move) them to your desktop, and then convert with Handbrake.


Take a look at this link and see if the procedure described there works for you:


https://bronami.video/avchd-files-extract-files/


-- Rich

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Feb 26, 2018 7:43 AM in response to beeenjammin

So, as I understand you, your HG20 is not a supported camera. Per my earlier post, that may be the cause of the problem.


In Finder, try control-clicking on the AVCHD folder and then click on Show Package Contents. In the package contents, in one of the folders, will be the MTS files that are the actual movie files. The MTS files are what need to be converted to an iMovie supported format. Option-drag (Copy, not move) them to your desktop, and then convert with Handbrake.


Take a look at this link and see if the procedure described there works for you:


https://bronami.video/avchd-files-extract-files/


-- Rich

Feb 27, 2018 11:17 AM in response to Rich839

WORKAROUND SOLUTION:


I import into Final Cut Pro X. Then I use the finder to go into the FCP bundle, locate my imported .mov file, and drag it into iMovie. Then it imports into iMovie and I can export my clips without any pixelation.


This is definitely not ideal but fixes the issue - if you can afford Final Cut.


(I tried using Handbrake and the way my camera works, is it makes separate .mts files every few minutes, so a 90 minute show is 15 different .mts files - and handbrake will only import one at a time, whereas imovie and final cut treat all those mts files as one movie file - so that doesn't work.)

Feb 9, 2018 1:44 PM in response to beeenjammin

Hi,


It could be a compression artifact or possibly some corruption in the clip.


Try sharing at High Quality, Better Quality Compression, and higher resolution if such an

option is available.


You also can try sharing in Best (pro res) if you don't mind a high file size.


Another thing you can try is to open the clip in QuickTime Player, and save to your desktop. You will get a .mov file. Drag that into iMovie and see if it plays properly.


-- Rich

Feb 9, 2018 2:56 PM in response to beeenjammin

You could experiment with various compression settings until you find one that doesn't cause compression artifacts in your shared project. I would reduce the resolution to 720 (or one level below the resolution in which the video was recorded). Reducing to 540 apparently was too big a jump. Use Handbrake to set the encoder as H.264 and the container as Mp4 if not already that. You can use Handbrake to reduce the audio quality if audio quality is not paramount. Or you could eliminate an unnecessary audio track.


Here's a You Tube vid that discusses some of this:


How to Reduce Video File Size Without Sacrificing Quality


-- Rich

Feb 23, 2018 8:50 AM in response to beeenjammin

What you see in the iMovie library should be exactly what came out of the camera. If you are seeing pixelation that was not there in the camera preview, then perhaps iMovie is not functioning properly or the clip is in a video format that iMovie doesn't support. What are the specs of your movie clip? Open it in Quicktime and click on Window/Show Movie Inspector. Take a screen shot of the inspector window and post it here.


What puzzles me is that iMovie exports it with no pixelation at 1080p.


Since it is a simple thing to do, you might try opening iMovie while holding down the Option and Command keys, and selecting to delete preferences in the box that appears. Sometimes that cures glitches. Also, I would update to High Sierra, because iMovie 10.1.8 (that I assume you are using) was designed for that operating system.


A practical consideration: Rather than fight it why not just use Final Cut Pro since it works there?


-- Rich

Feb 23, 2018 11:32 AM in response to beeenjammin

Your iMac Late 2009 can run High Sierra. You would need 2GB memory and 14.3 GB of available storage for the download.


macOS High Sierra - Technical Specifications


I was thinking more of your 2017 MacBook Pro.


As for the clip specs, they all look fine. Per my earlier post, for diagnostic purposes you can try using the free download, Handbrake, to convert the clip to Mp4/AAC, that Handbrake will do by default. Then see if that makes any difference. Also, try exporting from your camera to your desktop using the Image Capture app on your Mac. Then drag the movie into iMovie and see if that solves it. Possibly iMovie is not importing it properly with a direct import.


I didn't see your Canon HG20 listed in Apple's list of iMovie supported cameras. (There is a Canon HF G20, so maybe your post had a typo.) Perhaps that's the problem. If it's a tape based camera, it could still be supported even though not specifically listed. Here's the list in case I missed your camera:


iMovie supported cameras - Apple Support


At the start of this I was of the opinion that it was a compression artifact. But since it pixelates in the iMovie library, before share-out compression, then that likely is not the cause. At this point I am out of ideas as to what may be causing the issue.


-- Rich

Feb 10, 2018 8:25 AM in response to beeenjammin

File size and quality are always a trade off. iMovie has compression and bitrate adjustment capabilities to deal with it on a consumer level. You can choose higher or lower resolution, higher or lower bitrate, faster or better compression. To build in the professional converter and audio editing capabilities of specialty apps, though, would be beyond the pale of a free consumer app I would think.


-- Rich

Feb 23, 2018 10:16 AM in response to Rich839

Rich - thank you for all your replies. I really appreciate it.


Screenshot of the quicktime info:
User uploaded file
As an addendum to my original issue, it seems that sometimes exporting in 1080 does not fix the pixelation.


I will try to delete preferences. Thank you for the idea.


I'm not sure my iMac Late 2009 can handle High Sierra?


The practical reason I don't just use Final Cut Pro is because I use iMovie to chop up and export a 90 minute show into 10-15 clips that are each about 7 minutes. The iMovie export is significantly faster (3-4 minutes per clip) than FCPX. And I do this stuff all the time, so the time savings adds up.

Feb 25, 2018 8:01 PM in response to Rich839

When I try to do image capture app, it does not detect my camera. Although the finder detects it as a harddrive.


When I import the Canon hard drive file called AVCHD into handbrake, it tells me "No Valid Source Found"


I checked and Canon HG 20 is a different camera from the Canon HF G20 (confusing, I know).


I guess I'm gonna try to import directly to the MacbookPro 2017 and see if that helps (it's annoying to do because my camera is USB 2.0 and my external drive is USB-C, so I can't use both of those and the power cord... stay tuned (or not)

Feb 27, 2018 12:11 PM in response to beeenjammin

Looks like we had the right workaround but just needed to find the correct converter for your camera. Interesting that FCP converts the MTS files. I'll remember that in case someone else reports your issue and also has FCP on their computer. iMovie used to convert the MTS files but doesn't in recent iterations.


Did the MTS files that you converted with Handbrake play without pixelation?


BTW, you can do batch conversions in Handbrake by adding them to queue. You don't need to do them one at a time.


-- Rich

Feb 28, 2018 8:15 AM in response to Rich839

I quit the handbrake conversion because it was taking too long before seeing how it did. I might be wrong about handbrake, but my understanding is, even if I used the queue, it would create 19 converted mov/mp4 files from the 19 mts files, and not 1 .mov/.mp4 from the 19 mts files. (It's a moot point as I have a work around.)


current iMovie also converts the MTS files into a .mov - but it creates that pixelation issue

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Exported files pixelate

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