Yes. Broadheads hitting above field points indicates that the arrow is leaving the bow nock low. With a field point, the fletching can easily correct the attitude of a nock low arrow, but with a broadhead, the greater surface area up front fights the fletching and has more ability to steer the arrow off course. The spread between BH and FP point of impact will grow at longer yardages.
As a general rule when tuning, it's a good idea to put your arrows on a spinner beforehand to visually check for good alignment, especially when shooting broadheads. It's also wise to replicate your results multiple times with multiple different arrows before making any adjustments to make sure the apparent tuning issue isn't just an anomaly specific to a particular arrow (due to misalignment or spine inconsistency).
You've referred to how the arrow looks on video multiple times. I would ignore the video and focus on what your points of impact are telling you. Lighting conditions and vane colors can trick your eye into seeing flight anomalies that aren't really there. Where the arrow lands is what counts. Also, as mentioned above, you hunt with a broadhead (not with a bareshaft and not through paper) so broadhead tuning ultimately trumps all other methods.