My video editor suddenly can't see my video clips ... HALP!
January 15, 2009 12:33 PM
All of a sudden Premiere Elements doesn't know what to do with my AVI files. GAAHH!
So about two weeks ago, I created this really elaborate video in Premiere Elements (7, the latest version, Vista). Lots of edits, lots of clips from lots of different source files, all of which were taken on a Flip camera. No problem, it worked great.
Today, I go back to make edits ... and all of my AVI files in the timeline are sound only, no video. (Actually, a tiny little bit of squiggly color along the bottom - it's like the whole video has been smooshed down to about ten pixels tall). I've got some still photos in this project, they're fine. It's just my AVIs.
When I open the source files in WMP, they play just fine. So there's nothing wrong with the AVIs. And the fact that I can play them in WMP means there's no missing codecs or anything like that (doesn't it?)
So, why is Premiere Elements doing this - and more to the point, how can I salvage this edit file with all of those dozens of edits and crossfades and so on? Is there some trick to re-associating them? I'm wracking my brain to think of something/anything on my computer that might have changed or been installed in the past two weeks, but I'm not aware of anything.
So about two weeks ago, I created this really elaborate video in Premiere Elements (7, the latest version, Vista). Lots of edits, lots of clips from lots of different source files, all of which were taken on a Flip camera. No problem, it worked great.
Today, I go back to make edits ... and all of my AVI files in the timeline are sound only, no video. (Actually, a tiny little bit of squiggly color along the bottom - it's like the whole video has been smooshed down to about ten pixels tall). I've got some still photos in this project, they're fine. It's just my AVIs.
When I open the source files in WMP, they play just fine. So there's nothing wrong with the AVIs. And the fact that I can play them in WMP means there's no missing codecs or anything like that (doesn't it?)
So, why is Premiere Elements doing this - and more to the point, how can I salvage this edit file with all of those dozens of edits and crossfades and so on? Is there some trick to re-associating them? I'm wracking my brain to think of something/anything on my computer that might have changed or been installed in the past two weeks, but I'm not aware of anything.
You know what did install itself, as recently as today? That awful upgrade to the Flip Video program. I bet that's the culprit.
So, I suppose then the only thing to do is to reinstall Premiere Elements, and hope it places its proper codec over top of the offending one? Or is there a better way to ferret it out?
posted by jbickers at 3:00 PM on January 15, 2009
So, I suppose then the only thing to do is to reinstall Premiere Elements, and hope it places its proper codec over top of the offending one? Or is there a better way to ferret it out?
posted by jbickers at 3:00 PM on January 15, 2009
So, I suppose then the only thing to do is to reinstall Premiere Elements,
I feel your pain. I would try a system restore to some point in the last few days first if you've made no other major changes. Just to make sure, you didn't move *anything* associated with the project did you? Premiere hates that.
posted by mrmojoflying at 6:00 PM on January 15, 2009
I feel your pain. I would try a system restore to some point in the last few days first if you've made no other major changes. Just to make sure, you didn't move *anything* associated with the project did you? Premiere hates that.
posted by mrmojoflying at 6:00 PM on January 15, 2009
This thread is closed to new comments.
posted by shmegegge at 2:05 PM on January 15, 2009