Get professional processing even though you know nothing about how to do that.
Encoding a video is a long process. It is worth checking before encoding so your finished results will appear as you wish :)
To preview, click on the eye.
A window will open and play your source as it will be encoded (according to your appearance settings).
The conformity of the output ( for DVD or DV, PAL or NTSC) and the synchronisation are controlled by MovieConverter Studio, just check that you agree with the appearance settings you've chosen.
A source file can sometimes appear in several different forms (e.g. DV videos or satellite streams have the same source size no matter if they appear in 4:3 or 16:9 format on the tv screen). For every dubious case (such as an anamorphic source file), MovieConverter Studio will warn you and will ask you to select more precisely the appearance settings that you prefer.
The Internet abounds with legal videos. Instead of having to pay for them, you will often get advertising screens before the actual video. And if your video is a movie trailer coming from the States, you will systematically undergo a 4 second "Parental guidance" screen :-(
These before-programs annoy me, this tool will allow you to cut them off :-)
Click on "the scissors"
and a window will open (allowing you to trim your cuts setting)
If your source file is compatible with QuickTime, it will be displayed (it's always more practical to set a cut when one sees what one is doing). If your source isnt compatible with QuickTime, you will be still allowed to cut the lead-in, but without preview.
If you do not see the button (scissors), your source file can not be trimed (it's not a QuickTime compatible file, nor compatible with an encoding process that would allow you to cut with accuracy).

In 99% of the cases, automations should be sufficient (it's just an option for the specialists).
MovieConverter Studio includes 2 decoders:
QuickTime performs the best with .mov, FFmpeg performs the best in particular with MPEG.
Each one has its own weaknesses. The strengths lie in how they complement each other.
MovieConverter Studio takes time to analyze your source, it determines the decoder "which suits it best".
ou can also check if the decoder is able to decode your source by choosing to preview the result.
What are fields? See the chapter Understanding interlaced video.
An interlaced source file contains 2 different "images" (2 fields) in each frame, but which field has to be displayed first?
If the field's decoding order is the right one, you'll see … the frames are displayed in the normal order ;-)
If the field's decoding order is wrong, you'll see on your tv screen :
frame 2, then the 1st, then the 4th, then the 3rd, and so on (you are in for a good headache!).
If you have seen the movie "Phantom of the Paradise" by Brian De Palma : the electrocution of the singer (the one named "Beef") is produced by an inversion in the order of the frames. It jerks, it vibrates, it's ugly :-) (But here, it is a matter of special effects. Avoid doing the same thing involuntarily).
The interlace information is supposed to be written inside the video.But some software forgets this information and some hardware indicates it incorrectly…
MovieConverter Studio allows you to correct (or only check) the possible interlace mode of EVERY source file.
This tool has 3 main functions:
In some cases of standards changes (telecine) or appearance changes (from a 4:3 source file towards a 16:9 one), it's in your interest to check the content of a video tagged as interlaced.
MovieConverter Studio will match the size of your source to the target format, by adding black strips if necessary.
Moreover, whatever the normal settings of the display (4:3 or 16:9), MovieConverter will ask you to change the display of your source file in order to:
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As MovieConverter Studio is really kind, it will even show you exactly what it's going to do, how it will treat your source file:
You don't need to supply a source with "a size compatible to …", EVERY source file can be treated according to the specifics of the final aspect.
Video noise reduction consists in smoothing the frame by comparing the present frame with the former ones and with the following ones. Point-by-point differences will be erased (e.g. this is the case for dust in a video : the traces do not follow a regular course -like a camera does- but they scutter randomly into each frame of the video. Therefore they will be detected and removed).
The graininess of the film roll is also a random element (neither continuous nor systematically the same in every frame). Keep in mind that noise reduction is also an information suppression from your source file.
Thus, and ONLY IF your source needs it:
MovieConverter Studio is able to encode your audio into AC3, stereo, 192Kb/s (this is one of the settings generally used in commercial stereo DVDs).
Like MP3s (or MP2s or AACs), AC3 is a compressed audio format. Unlike the MP2 (Mpeg1 Audio Layer 2, useful also for DVD), AC3 is the format most compatible with DVD players.
You would like another setting? You're a sound engineer and you'd like less compressed audio? …output the audio into .wav (a non-compressed format) and handle it as you like.
You don't have a choice, alas, for DV audio output. Only the .wav -non-compressed format- is compatible.
Although its name doesn't reveal it (it's just the name of the tool which MovieConverter uses for this processing), "Normalize" is an audio limiter/expander (which also normalizes ;-)).
"Normalize" means:
"Normalize" will seek the sound average of your audio and will normalize it (to -12db).
"Normalize" will look for the audio's higher peak (the loudest level) and will set it at the maximum height allowed (to -6db) by paying attention that the sound never saturates (that is the limiter function). If the audio level of your source file was too low, "Normalize" will increase the gain (the volume).
If the audio of your source file had too "packed sounds", "Normalize" will allow you to distribute all these sounds in larger range (that is the expander function). Sounds will be clearer, distinctions will be lessened, your ears will be less stressed.
With "Normalize", do not expect for a result as good as DVD’s audio, but it will be better than what you had before.
Theother advantage of "Normalize" is that all the target files will have a sound level that is more or less constant. If you burn a DVD containing several files, you will not be obliged to play with the volume level of your remote control with every track change (that is the normalizer's function).
Technology (…for those who have "a good ear" or are curious):
hy 2 encoders? …I mainly only use FFmpeg.
It's my favorite, it's a little bit faster, it's more complete, makes smaller files on the disk with the same quality, …
BUT it is not very impressive with too slow bit-rates and isn't precise with their maximum thresholds (2 qualities possessed by the great mpeg2enc).
If you have a true emotional relationship with mpeg2enc, use it anyway. You'll even be able to select it as default in the preferences!
Common options of mpeg2enc and FFmpeg:
Output your source file "for DVD" (PAL or NTSC) or to DV format (PAL or NTSC):
DV output: some hardware encoders (e.g. EyeTV) can capture video streams and forget to correct the field order while exporting to DV format.
Load and encode each source one at a time or…
load several sources and encode each one while you're sleeping ;-)
Mark "Batch processing", the button in the main window changes:


Each source you validate (by clicking on "+") will be added to the list of the sources to be encoded.
While "Batch processing", the application is not locked, you'll be allowed to:
Click on the triangle to display complementary information about the source file (…just for curiosity)
Click on the triangle to display the estimated size of the target (…just for fun)