So I just got back from seeing The Hobbit today. It was my third time seeing it (the first time in IMAX 3D, the second just regular 2D), and this time I saw it at 48 frames per second in 3D. (we didn't have an IMAX 3D 48fps option in town)
Just thought I'd share some thoughts and start the discussion about this experiment here. I work a lot with video and I've come to really understand the differences in frame rates and why they exist for different mediums. When I do home videos they don't look like film because they have a few more frames per second (29.97 vs 24).
Two of my friends have newer TVs that have a "motion smoothing" feature built in that is turned on by default. When they first installed them and put on a movie, I noticed things felt like they were moving faster than they should. My friends mostly didn't understand until I found the feature and disabled it. Generally they agreed it was better off, even though you get motion blurring on faster scenes and actions.
So seeing The Hobbit at 48 fps was just.....weird. It reminded me of older BBC shows and specials I've seen, which use a different frame rate than here in the states. When I first saw Bilbo, it was like he was hyper and zooming around the room, like the film was sped up. It was especially distracting during battles or scenes with a lot of action.
On the plus side, once I got used to it (more or less) I kind of enjoyed the static talking scenes like Gandalf and Bilbo at the beginning, or Gandalf and Galadriel in Rivendell. I could also tell it had the most detail onscreen of any of the showings I saw. I think it also enhanced the 3D effect some at a lot of points. There were even a few moments where it seemed more real than a normal screen.
But on the down side, the lighting, some of the makeup and a lot of the effects looked really fake. Overall it was just a weird experience. And having seen it at 24 fps twice before, I knew that it normally looked very good, just like Lord of the Rings.
I think the biggest problem is that the human eye is designed to see motion blurring. If you wave your hand back and forth really fast, you see a blurry hand made up of your hand at various points.
I give Peter Jackson a lot of credit for trying something new, but I think that the result needs a lot of work in finding a balance between smoothness and blur.
What did you guys think?