For this one I got 19 right, although the last one was guess 😜 I had the wind for Q4. Thanks Robert for something to do for six minutes while my tea is brewing.
@WindsweptRobertАй бұрын
Tea, coffee, milk, beer...all is good ;)
@ptaylor5014Ай бұрын
All wrong except for the last one 😜😜, no not really lol i got 19 correct.
@NickB_YorkshireАй бұрын
Oh dear. Three wrong today. Thought it was further away from airports and I thought motion blur was better at less than 60fps, plus I was wrong about the requirements for commercial flying.
@SirBeauJanglesАй бұрын
Cinematic means like in cinemas. The cinema industry has for decades standardised on 24fps, so if you want to be like the cinema it has to be 24fps…
@WindsweptRobertАй бұрын
The Hobbit trilogy was filmed 60fps for the cinema.
@SirBeauJanglesАй бұрын
@@WindsweptRobert Hi Robert - my information is that Jackson shot his terrible Hobbit flix not at 60fps but at 48fps as an experiment - ie double the established standard of 24fps - and audiences reacted badly to this - they reportedly didn't like its strong resemblance to too-smooth TV/video - which rarely (never?) runs at 24fps - But 24fps has been the *cinema* industry standard since.... - Shortly after/during when talkies were becoming the norm I think... Previously, silent movies were often run by hand cranked projectors where the FPS wasn't constant at all, hence the comedy jerky clips to be seen on sites about old silent movies like those of the Keystone Cops, Buster Keaton etc. Not that it matters much outside the cinema industry when nowadays you can choose from a number of frame rates if using video - but "cinematic" - does mean "like the cinema standard" - which historically is the standard 24fps. While anyone may of course use any frame rate he likes in his own movies, if you make a statement to your audience that a different rate than 24 is "cinematic" - you're - albeit innocently - misleading the troops.