Not 24fps?
You got it! (58 minutes)
Of course I am talking about movies shot on silver halide (film)...Only two feature films were shot at 30 FPS..."Oklahoma" and "Around the World in 80 Days" Oklahoma was shot twice...they would do a take, first on Todd-AO "70mm" at 30 fps, then Cinemascope at 24 fps.
They had to do it twice because most theaters couldn't project 30 fps so the Cinemascope 24 fps was for those houses.
Todd AO was 70mm...when you hear about 70 mm movies they are talking about Todd AO...and the projectors could be "overclocked" at 30 fps.
Producer Mike Todd wanted the film industry to switch to shooting at 30 fps, even ordinary movies.
But...If you did that...
- your budget for film stock and processing would be increased by 25 percent...
- You would have to retrofit movie houses.
- If you wanted magazines to last 10 minutes they would have to be made to hold 25% longer loads.
- Many don't like the "Soap Opera Effect"
So only the two movies were done 30 fps.
This would be similar to what happened in the last half of the 1920's...Silent movies were filmed at just 16 fps before...Which is why they look strange even projected at the right speed.
Look at Harold Lloyd running...
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