<Video />
This component allows you to include a video file in your Remotion project. It wraps the native HTMLVideoElement
.
API / Example
Use an import
or require()
statement, a URL, or staticFile()
to load a video and pass it as the src
prop.
All the props that the native <video>
element accepts (except autoplay
and controls
) will be forwarded (but of course not all are useful for Remotion). This means you can use all CSS to style the video.
tsx
import {AbsoluteFill ,Video } from "remotion";importvideo from "./video.webm";export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video src ={video } /></AbsoluteFill >);};
tsx
import {AbsoluteFill ,Video } from "remotion";importvideo from "./video.webm";export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video src ={video } /></AbsoluteFill >);};
Remote video
You can load a video from an URL as well:
tsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video src ="http://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/gtv-videos-bucket/sample/BigBuckBunny.mp4" /></AbsoluteFill >);};
tsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video src ="http://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/gtv-videos-bucket/sample/BigBuckBunny.mp4" /></AbsoluteFill >);};
note
During render, Remotion will download the video to include it's audio in the output. If you don't need the audio, you can add the muted
prop.
Trim video
Use startFrom
and endAt
to define when the video should start and end. Both are optional and do not get forwarded to the native <video>
element but tell Remotion which portion of the video to use.
tsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video src ={video }startFrom ={59} // If the video is 30fps, then it will start at 2sendAt ={120} // If the video is 30fps, then it will end at 4s/></AbsoluteFill >);};
tsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video src ={video }startFrom ={59} // If the video is 30fps, then it will start at 2sendAt ={120} // If the video is 30fps, then it will end at 4s/></AbsoluteFill >);};
Style video
You can pass any style you can pass to a native <video>
element. This is how you set it's size for example:
tsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video src ={video }style ={{height : 720,width : 1280 }} /></AbsoluteFill >);};
tsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video src ={video }style ={{height : 720,width : 1280 }} /></AbsoluteFill >);};
Codec support
Pay attention to the codec of the video that you are importing. During the render process, Chrome needs to support playing the video that you are embedding. If Remotion cannot find a preinstalled version of Chrome, it will download a Chromium executable which does not support the playback of H264 (common codec for MP4 videos). To work around this problem, you have multiple options:
- Tell Remotion which path for Chrome to use by using the command line flag
--browser-executable
or configureConfig.Puppeteer.setBrowserExecutable()
in a config file. - Convert your videos to WebM before embedding them.
Prior to Remotion 1.5, Remotion will always use an internal Puppeteer binary and MP4 videos are therefore not supported.
If you would like Remotion to warn you when you import an MP4 video, you can turn on the @remotion/no-mp4-import
ESLint rule.
Controlling volume
<Video>
accepts a volume
prop which allows you to control the volume for the whole track or change it on a per-frame basis. Refer to the using audio guide to learn how to use it.
Example using static volumetsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video volume ={0.5}src ={video } /></AbsoluteFill >);};
Example using static volumetsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video volume ={0.5}src ={video } /></AbsoluteFill >);};
Example of a fade in over 100 framestsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video volume ={(f ) =>interpolate (f , [0, 100], [0, 1], {extrapolateLeft : "clamp" })}src ={video }/></AbsoluteFill >);};
Example of a fade in over 100 framestsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video volume ={(f ) =>interpolate (f , [0, 100], [0, 1], {extrapolateLeft : "clamp" })}src ={video }/></AbsoluteFill >);};
Controlling playback speed
Available from v2.2
You can use the playbackRate
prop to control the speed of the video. 1
is the default and means regular speed, 0.5
slows down the video so it's twice as long and 2
speeds up the video so it's twice as fast.
While Remotion doesn't limit the range of possible playback speeds, in development mode the HTMLMediaElement.playbackRate
API is used which throws errors on extreme values. At the time of writing, Google Chrome throws an exception if the playback rate is below 0.0625
or above 16
.
Example of a video playing twice as fasttsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video playbackRate ={2}src ={video } /></AbsoluteFill >);};
Example of a video playing twice as fasttsx
export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Video playbackRate ={2}src ={video } /></AbsoluteFill >);};
Alternative: <OffthreadVideo>
<OffthreadVideo>
is a drop-in alternative to <Video>
. To decide which tag to use, see: <Video>
vs <OffthreadVideo>