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Post a Comment On: Mayerson on Animation

"Goodbye Film"

7 Comments -

1 – 7 of 7
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Nice post. I, too, will miss film, and the filmic quality of projection. I will NOT miss crappy projection by some pimpled faced teenager more interested in "butter flavored" popcorn than movies.

24 frames a second, along with 33 1/3 vinyl record speed were decided (picture first) due to the compatibility of the motors used in early sound film production (both motors made by same company). While the brief foray of Todd-AO into 30 fps was truly an improvement in image, I have yet to see any faster frame rate (48 fps or 60 fps) that is truly better than 24 fps. Even in 3D (which I've also seen).

And for animation, the impact is tremendous.

June 12, 2012 10:34 AM

Blogger Mark Mayerson said...

Moving live action to a higher frame rate doesn't measurably increase costs. Moving animation to a higher frame rate does. Computer inbetweens, whether in 2D or 3D, tend to make motion "floaty." It's because the inbetweens are too perfect. Just having motion on 1's at 24 fps requires extra care.

If animation goes to a higher frame rate, animators will have to do more keys in order to maintain the quality of the motion and render times will also increase.

I don't think the improvement in visual quality will be worth the extra effort, but somebody will undoubtedly try it.

June 12, 2012 10:43 AM

Blogger Dragos Stefan said...

What I find unpleasant about all this is that the culture itself becomes removed from a real-world, material, support. Books, images, film, video, everything would disappear if there's a blackout.
Culture propagated and evolved because the material support (paper, stone, metal) was surviving in time. That also made possible a lot of happy accidents (like the finding of some old prints of Metropolis, for example) that will not be possible anymore.

June 12, 2012 2:02 PM

Blogger Brubaker said...

I'm hoping that there will still be independents that continue to use film (like Mark Kausler's doing right now). Or at least use them as a master storage format. Super 16mm is pretty popular with the indie and documentary crowd. Basically similar to how Vinyl Records are still around (yes, they still make 'em).

But yeah, I'll miss film. I can understand why, but still...here's to fringe hold-outs.

June 13, 2012 2:00 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

"tend to make motion "floaty."

Like the awful "animation" in roger rabbit. Ugh.

June 13, 2012 9:24 AM

Blogger Michelle Folkman said...

For some years I was a projectionist in an art house theater. Every week hundreds of feet of film ran through my fingers, some of it just beautiful (Princess Mononoke, anyone?). I too will miss film. Perhaps we should hold a wake.

June 18, 2012 9:12 PM

Blogger Martin Juneau said...

Great post. But by my last experience to see a film in theaters (It was The Artist), it's like the film projection is over. I really miss the many scratches and imperfections who still make me happy to watch a real film, as opposed to a file who is register to a standard DVD.

I never own films projectors myself (Well, my dad got one but is useless) but seeing a feature in film was still a good investment for the efforts of each features. Today cinemas is more arranged since now it have to be Digital at all. I heard Christopher Nolan don't approve the new technology and like better to play his films by projectors again.

July 20, 2012 7:23 AM

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