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Activity Forums Adobe After Effects Premiere Pro CC Prores problems

  • Premiere Pro CC Prores problems

    Posted by Felix Crull on September 25, 2014 at 3:41 pm

    Hi all

    all of a sudden my Premiere does not import mov-files encoded in Prores 422 – that is: just the audio track is imported.

    Media Encoder as well cannot handle prores-files any longer.

    Re-installing Premiere and Quicktime did not help. The Prores codec seems to be broken. Does anybody know how to delete this codec in order to re-install it?

    Prores installation quits with “A later version of Apple Quicktime Prores decoder is already installed on your computer.”

    Also starting AME or Premiere takes ages…
    Seems to stall when Quicktime codecs are loaded.

    Help needed – thanks a lot in advance!

    felix

    Win 7 – AME 7.2.0.43 – Premiere Pro CC 7.2.1 (4)

    Michael Szalapski replied 10 years, 11 months ago 4 Members · 5 Replies
  • 5 Replies
  • Michael Szalapski

    September 25, 2014 at 4:02 pm

    Try this: https://blogs.adobe.com/aftereffects/2011/02/troubleshooting-quicktime-errors-with-after-effects.html

    – The Great Szalam
    (The ‘Great’ stands for ‘Not So Great, in fact, Extremely Humble’)

    No trees were harmed in the creation of this message, but several thousand electrons were mildly inconvenienced.

  • Felix Crull

    October 7, 2014 at 10:23 am

    Thanks for the link –
    which unfortunately didn’t help with my problems.
    In the end de-installing all related software and re-installing (premiere, QT, Java, Flash, Adobe Air, graphic card driver) in a new admin-account did the trick.

    Thanks anyway.

    felix

  • Chris King

    May 26, 2015 at 8:50 am

    Actually, ProRes in a MOV file format is beyond the compatibility of Adobe Premiere Pro. You can’t get a flawless workflow in most cases. To solve the problem, you need to change ProRes files to Premiere Pro CC most compatible format like MPEG-2.

  • Tero Ahlfors

    May 26, 2015 at 10:38 am

    [chris king] “Actually, ProRes in a MOV file format is beyond the compatibility of Adobe Premiere Pro.”

    Actually, you have no idea what you’re talking about. I use it daily on Windows and Mac machines on Premiere pro without any problems.

  • Michael Szalapski

    May 28, 2015 at 6:03 pm

    You are suggesting taking a PRODUCTION codec that IS USEABLE and encoding it into a lossy deliverable codec for production work? That’s…not good advice at all.

    – The Great Szalam
    (The ‘Great’ stands for ‘Not So Great, in fact, Extremely Humble’)

    No trees were harmed in the creation of this message, but several thousand electrons were mildly inconvenienced.

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