Thursday, September 29, 2005

The drama of film editing continues.

(sigh) The drama of post-production film editing just never ends! Maybe one day I'll shoot my next movie about my experience!

Since I'm having trouble bringing my footage from my home computer to the school computer using the Final Cut Pro editing system, I decided to use the Avid Xpress Pro editing system. Avid is the one that is generally used by Hollywood, although some tell me that Final Cut Pro is making inroads now. I have already taken courses in both editing systems, but Avid is a bit more of a challenge than Final Cut Pro.

Here's a link to Avid Xpress Pro:

http://www.avid.com/products/xpressprohd

And here's a link to a picture of the Avid interface:

http://www.avid.com/community/mac/images/Script_lg.gif

So what I decided to do is output the footage that I've worked on so far on my home computer to mini-DV tape on my Canon XL1 camcorder and that I would bring the tape to school so that I could recapture it on the Avid system. I went through two JVC tape decks and two Panasonic camcorders to transfer the footage to the PowerMac with no luck! In all four cases, there was tons of noise on both the video and audio portions of the playback. However, I just outputted the footage yesterday and played it back on my Canon and it was fine! I returned home and played that tape again and like last night, it was perfect with no noise. Anyway, I decided to output that whole footage again on a new mini-DV cassette tape and this time I would bring my Canon to school to capture it on the computers there. Before I went ahead, someone told me that it was possible that anything recorded on my Canon camera may be incompatible on other camcorders due to a tracking issue which can only be fixed through servicing. Anyway, I tried using my Canon to capture my footage and, believe it or not, the Avid system was rejecting my camera! I would later find out searching on the Internet that evening that there are tons of issues between Avid and Canon.

So a couple of techs came by and concluded the only way to do this would be to convert my mini-DV copy of my footage onto a JVC tape deck, in which the tape deck would record directly from my Canon. Then we took that tape and used the JVC deck to capture my footage on Avid and it worked! Finally! After almost a week of headaches, I finally began working on editing my film at school.

I promised many people that I will have my film out by Christmas, but after all these technical glitches, I'm not so sure that will happen, but I try to be hopeful.

No comments: