The Canon MOV highly compressed files are still not well supported by Adobe including the latest CS6, CC7, as you may encounter many audio and video problems. And I know that After Effects can’t handle raw MOV videos encode in H.264, so there is no doubt that it will take more time on rendering while ingesting the files. Back to the point, if you're attempting to edit Canon .MOV clips with After Effects, the best workaround is to use Brorsoft Video Converter(compatible with Windows 8) to encode Canon .MOV to MPEG-2 format for using in After Effects natively.
↧