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#401 |
Blu-ray Champion
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#402 |
Blu-ray Baron
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#403 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Jul 2008
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This discussion is pointless: 24p is not going away anytime soon and if you hate it, you simply don't like movies, a century of great movies...
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#404 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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. TV comes with motion interpolation for a good reason ![]() . More directors are starting to think outside the box and go HFR . Expect 60fps to become the norm not the exception (it migh take a little time to weed out the most closed-minded purists, but it will happen) . Peter Jackson was a genius |
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#405 | |
Banned
Jan 2017
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There's nothing inherently cinematic about 24p. The only reason 24p was first used was due to audio sync issues and because it was cheaper to shoot in than in higher framerate. Just because you got used to it doesn't mean that it's the only way movies should be experienced. Notice how all of the irrational individuals who prefer 24p don't state any technical reasons for supporting their silly opinion. Their opinion simply boils down to "just because." |
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#406 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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#407 |
Special Member
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You do know there's actually many directors who hate motion interpolation? Guys like Rian Johnson (Looper, SW EP VIII), or James Mangold who just despise it, and if you're a serious director, you'd despise it too. Hell, if you love cinema, you'll despise it, it's heresy to watch a 24 fps shot film with this crap.
Second: what are you talking about? "MOST" directors? where? in your closet? Aside from Doug Trumbull, Peter Jackson, Ang Lee & Jim probably with his four Avatar sequels, no one has made HFR films. Third: it's nice & everything, I'm excited about HFR for select films, but it'll NEVER be embraced, it's just reality, most people just don't like it, they just don't. HFR looks & feels better after several experiences. The thing is most people see Billy Lynn or The Hobbit once, hate the way it looks, and you're done, you're out, you don't get them a second time in the room unless they give it a shot. It's cool & all to say there's nothing inherently cinematic about 24 fps, but it has been the norm and the way films have looked for a hundred plus years, it's just what we are used to, and what we define as "cinematic". It's suspension of disbelief, HFR removes that, and as we've witnessed it with the gigantic backlash on The Hobbit and on Billy Lynn (I'm rooting for Ang, and I'm a 24 fps guy, but I have to admit that the reaction has been dreadful), most people just don't want it to feel real, they like feeling it's a film, and that they're not taken out of it. None of what you guys are saying are facts and you're not going to convince anyone of it. HFR is cool for select things, but it'll never catch on fire because it is too associated with what is perceived as a soap opera-ish look, or the video game look, it's just how it is. But hey, I hope Ang keeps exploring, folks can just watch the 24 fps if they don't dig the HFR. |
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#408 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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we can see that you like 60p but what your saying is ridiculous ' Expect 60fps to become the norm not the exception (it migh take a little time to weed out the most closed-minded purists, but it will happen)' yes of course. majority of people dont like it but it will become the norm. you are talking from your head, not backing it up with anything logical ![]() Last edited by DJJez; 02-18-2017 at 08:42 PM. |
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#409 |
Special Member
![]() Mar 2010
Portishead ♫
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I've watched Billy in 3D couple nights ago.
Impressive, very. Technically powerful, emotionally even more powerful. 90% (my score, for all). Last word: A Must Have in your Blu collection. ...Without one cent of a doubt. {Always believe in you first, than believe in Billy.} |
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Thanks given by: | Cheeks24 (02-19-2017) |
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#410 |
Member
Feb 2009
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Caught this tonight, after it finally hit cinemas over here last week in 2D 24fps, I decided to wait for my order instead. Glad I did, the 60fps experience had my parents and I fully enveloped into Billy's day, and brain. I watched the halftime sequence again on the 3D disk, and it was a different experience. The claustrophobia of the tunnel fight rather than the frankness of the moment, the expanse of emptiness of the soldiers on the stage as the stagehands are striking it, rather than the length of time it felt for Billy to still be standing still.
Amazing the emotional differences the same scenes can have when seen in dimensionality or movement clarity. Loved the film, and the 4K disk's experience really felt like the start of something special, if directors opt to utilise HFR on the correct films. Didn't like it with the first Hobbit, it felt too fantastical in the action sequences to let my mind opt in, but then a Rivendell conversation scene did make my jaw drop with clarity. Small dramas might work better for HFR than big action. |
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Thanks given by: | RockyIII (02-19-2017) |
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#411 |
Banned
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#412 | |
Banned
Jan 2017
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#414 |
Banned
Jan 2017
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#416 |
Banned
Jan 2017
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It was a joke. I'm not trying to win anyone over, because nothing we say on a forum frequented by 5 people will make a difference in the grand scheme of things.
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#418 |
Banned
Jan 2017
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#420 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Thanks given by: | AaronY (02-19-2017) |
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