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Activity Forums Apple Final Cut Pro Legacy FCP 7 to Premiere Pro CC 2018

  • FCP 7 to Premiere Pro CC 2018

    Posted by Tudor Applen on October 11, 2018 at 3:22 am

    So I have this ancient project from more than a decade ago. Back in 2009, I got dis-heartened and didn’t complete a personal project despite a huge investment.

    Fast forward to now… My wife wants to finish the project. But FCP 7 and my old mac are too ancient and slow. I want to work in the new Premiere and to learn it. (I’m an Avid guy, and FCP 7.) Problem is, despite using the XML export/import, the media is too old for the new Premiere. Adobe ditched QuickTime 7 movies, I’m to learn.

    Anyway, I want to keep my old work/FCP project & sequence, but I can’t relink to old media, apparently, in the new Premiere. Premiere CC 2018 won’t even see the old QuickTime files when “locating” in an attempt to re-link. I DID try converting QT files to AVI, and to MP4, but the re-linking didn’t work.

    Anyone have this challenge and a solution?

    Tudor Applen

    Nick Meyers replied 7 years, 7 months ago 5 Members · 9 Replies
  • 9 Replies
  • Michael Gissing

    October 11, 2018 at 11:37 am

    Try the xml in Resolve. It imports the same FCP xml as Pr. Quicktime is dead but quicktime files should be able to be read by Resolve and I would have thought Pr as well.

  • Michael Gissing

    October 11, 2018 at 11:38 am

    Curious what was the codec of the FCP project?

  • Matthew Ross

    October 11, 2018 at 1:05 pm

    [Tudor Applen] “I DID try converting QT files to AVI, and to MP4, but the re-linking didn’t work. “

    Instead of transcoding to AVI or MP4, try keeping the files Quicktime, but instead of whatever the original codec is, convert to a codec that Premiere still supports. So you could have .MOV files with something like DNxHD/HR, Cineform, or ProRes (if you can still transcode on a Mac). There is a list of codecs that Premiere will still support inside of Quicktime here: https://helpx.adobe.com/x-productkb/multi/quicktime7-support-dropped.html

  • Tudor Applen

    October 11, 2018 at 11:37 pm

    DVCPRO. Thanks for your help!

    Tudor Applen

  • Tudor Applen

    October 11, 2018 at 11:41 pm

    Thanks for the idea! I’m rummaging around for a compressor that will see these old DVCPro files (2004), but I’m having a little difficulty.

    Tudor Applen

  • Michael Gissing

    October 11, 2018 at 11:48 pm

    Resolve is free and can be used to batch convert DVCPro to DNx or ProRes (on a Mac) or it can be used to do the edit without transcoding as it reads DVCPro files.

  • Nick Meyers

    October 12, 2018 at 11:47 am

    you seem to still have FCP, so you can use that to transcode to Prores.
    you could media manage from with your project/s
    or just make a new project to media manage from,
    or use Resolve.

    nick

  • Mark Suszko

    October 17, 2018 at 8:58 pm

    Apple Compressor should be able to convert the DVC Pro in batches. MPEG Streamclip can do them one by one but it’s free. But I think Mojave may have killed it.

  • Nick Meyers

    October 19, 2018 at 12:18 am

    Mpeg Streamclip can work in batch BUT it will strip all the metadata from the files so is not recommended.
    Compressor *should * keep it.
    Media Manager will defiantly keep it AND update your sequences to the new format should you want that.

    nick

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