And with its ease of use, it does have the potential to become a common method for those longer movies you want to share with a social platform, or with friends and family. However, it’s a significant update that’s going to take advantage of the cameras and the content that every iPhone and iPad user has access to. With Instagram and TikTok already showcasing this feature, it would have made sense for this to come to iMovie 3.0. It looks like an evolution of the trailer feature above, with full movies now taking advantage of this.īut, it is disappointing that there’s no way to add audio transcriptions for when you’re editing a clip for a Storyboard or Magic Movie project. Having seen the features in action, it’s surprising how few taps and clicks are required to make a movie from start to finish. IMovie is something that goes as far back as the iLife suite in the early 2000s, where you would have a suite of apps such as iMovie, iPhoto, iWeb, and iDVD, all to help create content on your Mac.īut since iMovie’s appearance on iOS in 2010, followed by an iPad release in 2011, its usage has changed, which makes sense for these new features to arrive on iPhone and iPad first. This looks to be the next step in this feature that's been available on macOS since 2011. Magic Movie reminds us of its trailer feature in iMovie on macOS, where you can create small movies of movie trailers with your clips. It looks to automate how you can create a movie in a half-hour, without going through many menus to achieve the same result. You can also pick a soundtrack, such as a file from Garageband, Apple Music, or the Files app for example, and iMovie 3.0 will also adapt to this to fit the video, similar to TikTok and Instagram's takes. There's also helpful descriptions of where to add certain clips, whether it's for a close-up shot or something else to help fit the movie. Select the 'Live' photo(s) and import them. Select your phone icon should be under a grey 'Import' title in the sidebar. This feature will analyze your clips for dialogue and movement and will arrange them to fit the movie you've picked. Heres the procedure for transferring a 'Live' photo taken on an iPhone 6 on to a Mac and then into iMovie or Photos as a movie file: Connect your iPhone to your Mac using a USB cable Open 'Photos' on the Mac. You can re-arrange and delete clips, and the feature will adapt while keeping the theme of the project intact. Meanwhile, the Magic Movie feature allows you to select an album of photos and videos, and will compile these into a movie.
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