
Like mikedzk said, you can lower the smoothness slider so that the blur is accompanied by some camera movement or even turn it off -I would leave it off. I have checked and the settings and they are exactly the same. Now, however, it has been replaced with Warp Stabilizer VFX, which just makes the same shots look like they are underwater. I am afraid that neither another stabilizer nor After Effects can get rid of that. Premiere Pro CC 2017's 'Warp Stabilizer' effect worked great for so many things. In the "corrected" footage the camera is stable the whole time and we can see short flashes of blur in the exact moments where the camera trepidation took place, which is why it is much more noticeable. In the original video the movement of the camera shake hides the blur and makes it natural. In the stabilized video, you don't see the bump/shake because that's what the stabilizer has corrected, but the natural blur from that violent motion is still there. The difference is that on the original video, in the part where the camera is stationary while they are about to eat, there is violent a "bump" or "shake in the camera every now and then (and in those frames during the bump the footage is blurry).

I have checked the same frame on both videos and the faces are just as blurry. Like mikedzk said, you can lower the smoothness slider so that the blur is accompanied by some camera movement or even turn it off -I would leave it off-.Ok, I have checked the video and it is motion blur, just like I explained. I am afraid that neither another stabilizer nor After Effects can get rid of that.



Ok, I have checked the video and it is motion blur, just like I explained.
