A few visionaries - like effects ace Douglas Trumbull, who began developing a 60 fps process called Showscan during the late ’70s and continues to promote the concept of HFR - have tried to move the needle, but it wasn’t until Jackson began his Hobbit trilogy that 48 fps gained traction. Since the 1920s, Hollywood movies have been made at 24 frames per second. Bryan Singer, who visited Wellington, New Zealand, for The Hobbit‘s premiere, says he found the look of Jackson’s movie “really stunning.” But for X-Men: Days of Future Past, opening May 23, he stuck with 24 fps because, he says, “I had concerns about how certain sequences would look, and there is also a cost factor in rendering the visual effects.” And while other filmmakers are intrigued, none, so far, has followed Jackson’s example. will be equipped to show his new movie in the eye-popping new process. For all of Jackson’s proselytizing, at most, 1,000 screens out of the 39,056 screens in the U.S.
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