▲ | xnorswap 6 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
It doesn't "ruin the content", it's a psychological issue which would be fixed by more high quality productions actually producing high frame-rate content, so the association reverses. It seems insane to actively make all content worse, having movies worsened down to a lower frame-rate just because we have a hangover from decades old technology. It's a shame that Peter Jackson's Hobbit wasn't a great movie. Had it been, then maybe it could have been a better driver of high frame-rate movies. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | matt-attack 6 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Your premise to lower (temporal) detail his automatically worse is a naïve view. I’m certain you’re aware that impressionism is a valid, quite successful form of art. Do you think there are any critics who say a Monet painting would be far better if it, just had more detail? Oh if only Van Gough used a smaller brush his paintings would have been so much better! It needs “more k!”. Film making at 24fps (while originally selected for pragmatic reasons having to do with film cost and sound fidelity) turned out to be a happy accident. It produces an Impressionistic Effect entirely similar to a money painting. 24fps is absolutely not reality. Our brains know it too. The same way they know that those giant brush strokes in a Van Gough painting are also NOT REALITY. Turns out our brains like to be toyed with. Art is just always “trying to document precisely what our senses would have experienced if we were there”. That is just a false premise and one they misunderstands art in general. | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | Sammi 6 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I loved the first Hobbit movie, which was the only one that was mostly based on the book. It was the first and unfortunately also the only theater experience that I've ever had, that didn't make me feel frustrated that I couldn't make out anything that was happening in the fast sequences. | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | queenkjuul 6 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Lower framerate isn't worse, it's just different. But the artifacts introduced by TV frame interpolation absolutely can ruin the content completely. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | SirMaster 6 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I disagree with this. Even if the film is shot in HFR I don't like how it looks. It's just SOE, soap opera effect, and it has nothing to do with any artifacts from motion smoothing, because the look is the same even if it's filmed in HFR. The only things I like in HFR are sports or maybe home videos. Any sort of movie or TV show where I want the suspension of disbelief, I am still much preferring 24fps. Of course this is just my opinion, but home theater is a big hobby of mine and so I spend a fairly great deal of time looking at different content and analyzing it and thinking about it and how I feel about it or enjoy it. Not attempting to take anything away from those who do like HFR, but just saying that it's not for everyone. |