Pluraleyes 4 Premiere Pro Extension [better] Page
See a hands-on workflow and review of the panel's capabilities at ProVideo Coalition
Premiere Pro updated beyond the plugin’s support window. Fix: Downgrade Premiere to CC 2018 or use the Standalone version of PluralEyes 4 instead of the extension. pluraleyes 4 premiere pro extension
PluralEyes 4’s extension entered maintenance mode. The final update (April 2021) added support for Premiere Pro 2022 and Apple Silicon. The release notes read, simply: "Stability improvements. Thank you for 12 years of sync." See a hands-on workflow and review of the
However, technology moves fast. Apple killed 32-bit apps. Adobe iterated Premiere Pro constantly. While the extension remains a beautiful piece of software history, trying to run it on a modern editing rig is a recipe for crashes and frustration. The final update (April 2021) added support for
In the world of video post-production, few tasks are as tedious, time-consuming, and universally dreaded as syncing audio. You’ve spent hours on set capturing pristine audio from external recorders like Zoom H6s or Sound Devices mixers, while your cameras capture the visual reference audio separately. Now, in the editing suite, you are faced with the daunting task of aligning hundreds of clips manually.
While PluralEyes can run as a standalone app where you export an XML file, the (also known as a panel) allows it to run inside Adobe Premiere Pro. This means you don’t have to leave your editing timeline. You send your timeline to PluralEyes, it does the math, and it sends a synced timeline right back to Premiere Pro, perfectly aligned.
This visual feedback allows you to quickly scan your timeline and identify which clips need manual attention.