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I've found that generally with people 40fps (then played back at 24fps) ads a grace to movements of people. It smooths out camera moves and makes things generally look more beautiful. If possible, set the camera's shutter to 180 degrees (or 1/80th at 40fps)
If there is water, wind or heavy action involved, 60fps (played back at 24fps) is better. It will stop hair blowing in the wind and make it look magical.
Sometimes if things just look too "reality", but I don't want a fairytale effect, I'll choose 30fps (played back at 24fps). It smoothes motion a bit, but the footage isn't deliberately "slow motion" feeling.
If your camera can't do frame rates, you can shoot at 60i (standard HDV or NTSC) then use Apple's Cinema Tools or After Effects to re-conform the footage to 24fps (23.976 in the USA) This many need a deinterlace filter, or perhaps a downsample if you wish to have the best quality, but it works.
I should add that a 180 degree shutter is key to making footage cinematic. This means you set the camera shutter to half frame rate. For example, 24fps gets a 1/48th sec shutter. Don't open the shutter up all the way (or turn it off). This will give the camera more light, but the look of the footage will not look like a good film transfer. It will just look like slow video.
Post edited by: thomasarts, at: 2008/08/24 22:15
Sony EX1 and LetusExtreme with Canon EF lenses. HV30 backup. Lenses: (Canon EF) 16-35mm II 2.8, 24-70mm 2.8, 35mm 1.4, 50mm 1.4, 85mm 1.2, 100mm 2.8 macro, 70-200mm 2.8 IS, 200mm 2.8, 300mm f4, 1.4x extender. My favorite with the letus: 35mm 1.4.Canon EOS1ds mk2. 40d |