Postby wevowva » 22 May 2014 01:02
The "jerky" (one step back) artifact you're seeing relates to incorrect field interpretation at some point, question is where. If the file has been previously transcoded or encoded on a capture card, it's very possible the metadata describing field order within the file is now incorrect. This misinforms VLC and results in the artifact. Typical example is misinterpretation of DV source footage, which by default is LFF, but is easily misinterpreted by an untalented transcoder, card or technician as TFF which is the more common.
Be aware the artifact does not occur just in the doubled modes (Bob and Linear). If you look closely, you will see the "one step back" fields faintly in all modes that show both fields. It's just that these other modes blend the two fields in some manner, but Bob and Linear display all fields independently for 1/60th of a second, making it quite jarring. For true field-discrete 60i video the defect occurs once every frame, for 3:2 pull downs you only see it twice every 10 frames.
In fact, VLC can step to show ALL FIELDS one by one by hitting the "E" key, but only in the Bob and Linear modes. All other modes step frames. This is because other modes are a blending of 2 fields to make-up each frame or they discard non-dominant fields altogether.
For me, VLC has corresponded with all other decoders I can put my hands on. I've created test files with the field metadata defect and verified this. My guess here is that VLC doesn't have a bug at all, and that the place to examine is how each file your looking at is created.