But the most interesting thing is the poor reaction to the high frame rate version. This, from Peter Bradshaw in The Guardian, is pretty typical:
The second unexpected point is the look of the thing. Jackson has pioneeringly shot The Hobbit in HFR, or High Frame Rate: 48 frames a second, as opposed to the traditional 24, giving a much higher definition and smoother "movement" effect. But it looks uncomfortably like telly, albeit telly shot with impossibly high production values and in immersive 3D. Before you grow accustomed to this, it feels as if there has been a terrible mistake in the projection room and they are showing us the video location report from the DVD "making of" featurette, rather than the actual film.Some other critics have noted that it makes it way easier to spot the changes from special effects shots to reality, and that it makes fast motion look wrong (speeded up, I think they say.)
Isn't this fascinating? I'm pretty sure I read about high frame rate film back in about the 1980's, maybe in something like Omni magazine, or perhaps Discover. It was thought to be the way of the future.
But, it turns out, too much clarity look bad.
I wonder why that is. I could go for the philosophical explanation: maybe we prefer soft edges over reality, just as people don't like to think too much of the materialist/existentialist view of the world that says it is ultimately meaningless after the suffering and temporary bursts of happiness of life. (I am full of Christmas cheer, hey?) Of course, the religious and (in particular) Christian come back is that ultimate reality is better than what we get living in this muck. I take it that Heaven looks better than high quality video, though.
Or it could be that part of our normal vision that we concentrate on means the perimeter is not sensed as if it is in focus, and hence our normal vision does not have a widescreen clarity that sharp digital has?
Anyway, all that matters is that some people don't like it. Yay.
* all of the Lord of the Rings movies scored in the 90 percent range. It was a lonely job, being bored with those films.
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