Continuum 2026.5: AI to Revive Your VHS Tapes Without a Headache

Published on June 03, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Boris FX has released Continuum 2026.5, an update to its well-known visual effects package. The main new feature is an AI-powered tool that deinterlaces old videos, automatically transforming them into progressive format. This allows restoring recordings from VHS tapes or analog TV with remarkable quality, without requiring specialized equipment or tedious manual processes.

vintage VHS tape feeding into a modern video editing workstation, analog glitch lines being pulled apart by a glowing digital deinterlacing tool, AI processing nodes visible as floating blue grids around the footage, before-and-after split screen showing interlaced artifacts dissolving into smooth progressive frames, cinematic technical illustration, dark studio lighting with neon cyan accents, realistic plastic cassette shell, worn magnetic tape visible, monitor displaying waveform monitor and timeline, photorealistic engineering visualization, action of restoration process demonstrated in real-time

How AI Sweeps the Legacy of Interlacing Under the Rug ๐Ÿงน

The new filter in Continuum 2026.5 analyzes frame by frame to detect and recombine interlaced video lines, a process that previously required specific plugins or manual adjustments in editing software. The AI not only removes the annoying comb effect but also reconstructs missing information, reducing artifacts and improving smoothness. This is useful for those working with news archives, documentaries, or digitized home footage, as it saves time and avoids complex configurations.

Now Your Uncle's Wedding VHS Looks Almost Like 4K ๐Ÿ“ผ

If you have a box full of VHS tapes of your cousin's first communion or your 1995 vacation, this update is your new best friend. Forget spending hours configuring filters or paying a technician; now the AI takes care of making your uncle's dancing video look like it was recorded yesterday. Sure, the content will still be the same, but at least the pixels won't remind you that 90s technology was basically a drunk octopus.