Peter Jackson Filming The Hobbit at 48 Frames Per Second

Peter Jackson Filming The Hobbit at 48 Frames Per Second

Follow the jump to read why director Peter Jackson has elected to shoot The Hobbit a little differently than other films. Plus, two new production photo's.

By Hawksblueyes - Apr 12, 2011 06:04 AM EST
Filed Under: Fantasy
Source: Facebook

The Hobbit Director Peter Jackson has left quite an interesting entry on his Facebook page. The director goes into detail on the reasoning behind shooting The Hobbit at 48 fps instead of the usual 24 fps. Below is just a portion of what he has to say. Follow the link at the bottom of the article to read the complete explanation on his Facebook page.

We are indeed shooting at the higher frame rate. The key thing to understand is that this process requires both shooting and projecting at 48 fps, rather than the usual 24 fps (films have been shot at 24 frames per second since the late 1920's). So the result looks like normal speed, but the image has hugely enhanced clarity and smoothness. Looking at 24 frames every second may seem ok--and we've all seen thousands of films like this over the last 90 years--but there is often quite a lot of blur in each frame, during fast movements, and if the camera is moving around quickly, the image can judder or "strobe."

Shooting and projecting at 48 fps does a lot to get rid of these issues. It looks much more lifelike, and it is much easier to watch, especially in 3-D. We've been watching HOBBIT tests and dailies at 48 fps now for several months, and we often sit through two hours worth of footage without getting any eye strain from the 3-D. It looks great, and we've actually become used to it now, to the point that other film experiences look a little primitive. I saw a new movie in the cinema on Sunday and I kept getting distracted by the juddery panning and blurring. We're getting spoilt!."


Originally, 24 fps was chosen based on the technical requirements of the early sound era. I suspect it was the minimum speed required to get some audio fidelity out of the first optical sound tracks. They would have settled on the minimum speed because of the cost of the film stock. 35mm film is expensive, and the cost per foot (to buy the negative stock, develop it and print it), has been a fairly significant part of any film budget.

So we have lived with 24 fps for 9 decades--not because it's the best film speed (it's not by any stretch), but because it was the cheapest speed to achieve basic acceptable results back in 1927 or whenever it was adopted.

By: TwitterButtons.com

By TwitterButtons.com
RED ONE Looks Set For A Disastrous Opening Weekend After Taking In Just $3.7M From Thursday Night Previews
Related:

RED ONE Looks Set For A Disastrous Opening Weekend After Taking In Just $3.7M From Thursday Night Previews

RED ONE Star Dwayne The Rock Johnson Mocked For Sharing Bizarre Story About Watching OPPENHEIMER In IMAX
Recommended For You:

RED ONE Star Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson Mocked For Sharing Bizarre Story About Watching OPPENHEIMER In IMAX

DISCLAIMER: As a user generated site and platform, ComicBookMovie.com is protected under the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act) and "Safe Harbor" provisions.

This post was submitted by a user who has agreed to our Terms of Service and Community Guidelines. ComicBookMovie.com will disable users who knowingly commit plagiarism, piracy, trademark or copyright infringement. Please CONTACT US for expeditious removal of copyrighted/trademarked content. CLICK HERE to learn more about our copyright and trademark policies.

Note that ComicBookMovie.com, and/or the user who contributed this post, may earn commissions or revenue through clicks or purchases made through any third-party links contained within the content above.

Hawksblueyes
Hawksblueyes - 4/12/2011, 6:42 AM
;P
marvel72
marvel72 - 4/12/2011, 7:00 AM
sounds cool,peter jackson the man when it comes to filming middle earth.

i have faith he'll deliver.
Shesmiel
Shesmiel - 4/12/2011, 7:07 AM
Haven't digital HD camera's been shooting 60fps for a decade now?
Betty
Betty - 4/12/2011, 7:11 AM
They should reshoot the star wars prequels at 48 fps. It might make them better.
JR
JR - 4/12/2011, 7:11 AM
Great... now will see movies with a Soap Opera touch, i guess he beat James Cameron right? bad news.... for me, why would i like to see a movie with a more real feeling??? i would concentrate more in the CGI crap since everything this days looks updated (Episode 1 for example)
JR
JR - 4/12/2011, 7:11 AM
sorry outdated..
jonedc
jonedc - 4/12/2011, 7:12 AM
I want to make my own Mount Rushmore.. It would have Peter jackson,George Lucas, Gene Roddenbery and Stan lee..
CaptainAmerica
CaptainAmerica - 4/12/2011, 7:16 AM
Lmao Betty
Hawksblueyes
Hawksblueyes - 4/12/2011, 7:33 AM
I am beyond confident that Peter Jackson is not going to produce a Hobbit film that visually resembles a Soap Opera JR.
DarthTesla
DarthTesla - 4/12/2011, 7:45 AM
Enough science talk, show us dragons!!!!
Zounds
Zounds - 4/12/2011, 8:08 AM
Love articles on the mechanics of film making. Is it just The Hobbit that's gone 48 fps or is Weta working like this across the board?

Apologies if the latter is a silly question. The latest Weta footage of ROTPOTA's Caesar looks amazing, subtle as it is.

+++

@jonedc Nice. I'd submit Ridley Scott to be in there somewhere, even if it was just for Blade Runner alone.
comicb00kguy
comicb00kguy - 4/12/2011, 8:22 AM
Interesting and educational stuff. Didn't know all that about the frames per second in live action film making. Looking forward to seeing the results.

Jonedc: Not wanting to hijack the thread, but you pose a really intriguing question. My Mount Rushmore would be Jack Kirby, Tex Avery, Matt Groening, and J.R.R. Tolkien. (liked your picks, but I had to make room for Kirby, without whom we probably would have never had the Marvel Universe as we know and love it) Besides, I didn't want to just parrot your list. Where's the fun in that?
Hawksblueyes
Hawksblueyes - 4/12/2011, 8:55 AM
No that is a cool idea. I have to do some think for my Mount Rushmore.
GrayFox1025
GrayFox1025 - 4/12/2011, 8:58 AM
@comicb00kguy- I'd throw in Steve Ditko as well, without whom we wouldn't have Spider-man. Although Stan the Man is often given more credit for the creation of Spider-man, he himself gives more credit to Ditko
HarrisonBergeron
HarrisonBergeron - 4/12/2011, 9:09 AM
This sounds like it would the fight scenes in Transformers better.
Rodimus9
Rodimus9 - 4/12/2011, 9:31 AM
Ridley Scott, James Cameron, Roland emmerich and Gore Verbinski. That's just me.
TyrannicalOverlord
TyrannicalOverlord - 4/12/2011, 10:27 AM
@ HArrison- It probobly would make Transformers easier to watch. First time I saw it I had a few beers and couldn't see shiz-nit.

@BEtty- Nothing could make the Star Wars prequel look any better. They shoulda stopped after Empire.
sinchsw
sinchsw - 4/12/2011, 10:33 AM
@Shesmiel - digital cameras usually shoot at 30 or 60 fps, but directors often like to turn them down to 24 fps to help get the film feel (if the option is even available on the camera).

There is a big difference in the way the image feels moving between those speeds. 24 is more dreamy and cinematic, and 30 or 60 is more soap opera/tv news/sitcom.

48 would only double the speed so it would retain the cinematic feel but also be smoother, as he stated.

SFCamerica
SFCamerica - 4/12/2011, 10:34 AM
@ JR - couldn't agree with you more. Recently bought a 63" 3D Samsung, that Soap Opera Affect you speak of drives me absolutely nuts! Took me forever to figure out how to shut that off, if this is anything like that, as much as I love LOTR, forget it! Can't believe I just said that!
Shesmiel
Shesmiel - 4/12/2011, 10:46 AM
@sinchsw - Thanks, that makes sense.
Facade
Facade - 4/12/2011, 11:48 AM
Epic
RacerREX
RacerREX - 4/12/2011, 11:57 AM
I love this! I am soooo distracted by blurring in modern action scenes. What makes it all the worse is the "MTV" style fast cuts that have become so ubiquitous today.
Hawksblueyes
Hawksblueyes - 4/12/2011, 12:12 PM
RacerREX: I agree 100%. I hate to admit it but I couldn't even keep up with the action sequences from Transformers due to the blurring.
Rodimus9
Rodimus9 - 4/12/2011, 12:27 PM
So this is gonna be the new trend? 3D already wearin off so now it's fps? So the next guy will be at 60 fps, then there's 84, then 240.....awe jeeze!!
RexDartEskimoSpy
RexDartEskimoSpy - 4/12/2011, 2:13 PM
If what PJ says is true, maybe I'll actually see The Hobbit in 3D. Assuming we'll even have the choice by then.
View Recorder