I've come across this problem with a copy of Triumph des Willens, it actually looked like Riefenstahl herself had done a very poor job at keeping audio and film in-sync, at one sentence the audio was right, and BANG!, the next sentence the difference was up to 3 seconds between audio and visual, and next sentence, BANG!, back to perfect.Mitch Perkins wrote:I can vouch for this approach, (drift &slide), but found that cutting even one frame of picture was totally noticeable, unless it was end of shot...twotoneska wrote:On the picture side, I found it was sometimes necessary to cut a frame out here and there, but on the audio side, I mainly just matched the clap and slate at the beginning, and the synch would hold for a little while, and then when it drifted, I would go back a few frames, cut, slide it over, re-synch it with the lips, and fill in the blank space with matching ambient sound. It was time consuming overall, but once I did it a few times, the whole process became fairly simple and quick, it was just the fact that I had some masters that had a lot of drift, so they took a while to fix.
Do you have a secret?
I took the timecodes for certain visual sync points I chose, exported my audio, squeezed and stretched the audio in Cool Edit/Adobe Audition according to my timecodes and sync points within about two hours, re-married audio and video, done. Perfect sync, and other than messing around with cutting frames not noticable at all.