Reviews : Software : Video & Audio : Video Utilities
Video Utilities
Click images to select and enlarge
Red Giant Software Magic Bullet Steady - Left
Red Giant Software Magic Bullet Steady - Right
Red Giant Software Magic Bullet Steady - Perspective
Red Giant Software Magic Bullet Steady
RRP
$199.00

Review Date

Friday, 3rd of October, 2008

What's Hot

Faster and better than AE

What's Not

Expsensive

The Final Word

The plug-in’s main weakness is that it doesn’t allow you to manually modify stabilisation. Also while it’s faster and better than AE’s stabilisation tool, it might not be good enough to justify the cost — but it’s a useful addition to the Magic Bullet Suite nonetheless.

Red Giant Magic Bullet Steady
Get rid of the shakes.
Neil Bennett (IDG) 03/10/2008 16:20:00

Note: pricing for this product is in US$.

Shaky footage may be associated with amateur video, but it’s something professionals have to deal with on a regular basis. Whether it’s user-generated footage, something captured on the sly, a quick and dirty shoot or just a momentary case of shaky hands, it’s one of those things that seems minor enough to fix ‘in post’ — but can take a long time to get right.

Magic Bullet Steady attempts to help with this. It ships with a noise-reducer plug-in for dealing with the image noise problems that often accompany low-quality footage.

When you first apply the plug-in, a red hexagon appears on your footage with an exclamation mark to show that it hasn’t been analysed or corrected. Before you press the ‘Analyze’ button, you select either the Automatic Motion Detect mode or Manual, to select a region of the video. This allows you to select an area without moving elements in it — and this can be keyframed over time.

Analysing is remarkably quick. The plug-in worked through SD footage in almost twice real-time, and HD in footage in half real-time.

To see just how effective it was, we tested it on footage captured surreptitiously on a cheap Flip Video camcorder at the IFA trade show in Berlin, which combined low resolution (640x480 pixels), high compression, shaky camera-work, inconsistent lighting and people walking in front of the camera. The plug-in dealt remarkably well with the footage and the end result was a massive improvement.

You can modify the stabilisation using a well thought-out set of controls. There’s a ‘Use Scene Change Detection’ toggle that spots cuts and analyses shots individually. There’s a range of settings: Fast Shake, Wobble, Weave and All Motion (to give to look of a camera on a tripod).

Stabilisation leaves black borders, as the footage is moved horizontally and vertically. Magic Bullet can automatically zoom in to eliminate this, though it’s better done in the Instant HD plug-in if you own the full Magic Bullet Suite.

Additional Resources

Newsletter Subscription

Sign up for our PC World newsletters!
What should I do next?
Market Place
 
close
What’s New
CareerOne
Sponsored Links