Well that is weird weird weird….
I was going to ask you to check the clip properties, but since you provided a source file I was able to check it myself. I downloaded it and threw it on a 1080 24p timeline that I happened to have open…

As you can see, the clip properties show to be 1080, 23.976, and progressive. All should be good.
But it’s not… because that is not a progressive clip. Despite what the properties say it is absolutely totally without-a-doubt 100% assuredly an interlaced clip, and most decidedly not progressive.
Looking at it on my broadcast HD monitor (an LCD monitor) when video is parked on a frame with motion I can definitely see the two fields ghosting together. Furthermore, and more proving, when looking at it on the down-converted standard-def stream that comes out of my system on an old-fashioned CRT monitor (yes, we keep those around for monitoring what our projects look like in SD), you can definitely tell it is interlaced, with the still frame vibrating back and forth between the two fields.
SO, it was definitely recorded as interlaced. Now, considering that you did not make any camera changes (and are sure about that?) and considering that the clip properties still show it as progressive, something is obviously amiss.
I’m now going to say words that no one wants to hear, “I think you have a camera problem.” Not just a settings issue of operator error of some kind… unfortunately I think you have a repair issue. Most of that is based on the fact that the properties aren’t what the clip actually is, there’s no way for that to “accidentally” happen by doing something wrong.
Can you salvage the footage? Maybe, to a degree… by merging the fields. In Premiere you would select the clip on the timeline and go to “Field Options” and choose “Flicker Removal”….

…and that will merge the fields into one frame. It still doesn’t look great (you can still see the interlacing), but it looks a lot better than it did.
I think there is a way (in After Effects, maybe?) to extract the fields so that each frame is just made up of one field (I’d guess the upper) and the other field is discarded. I’m not sure because I have never needed to do that, but I think it can be done. That would give you true progressive footage. Unfortunately though you’d lose half of your lines of resolution.
As for the camera… sorry but unless there is some very wacky setting that I don’t know about, I think it needs professional attention.
T2
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Todd Terry
Creative Director
Fantastic Plastic Entertainment, Inc.
fantasticplastic.com
