Then they should release a 48fps trailer if that's the case. I'm actually curious to see it in the format it was intended.
we will not know how 48 fps looks if they realese the 48fps trailer online.
modern monitors support the technology that Cameron and Jackson are promoting in theaters?
Yuck. Too much frames per second and other cinema mumbo jumbo discussion for my liking here. I can't believe this is what everyone has decided to discuss instead of the actual scenes in the footage shown.
Entombing the Witch-king after his defeat in the Battle of Fornost completely changes the history of Middle-Earth.
After the battle the Witch-king fled south and later (with the other Nazgul) attacked Minas Ithil, taking the city and leading to it becoming known as Minas Morgul. He is also directly responsible for the end of the royal line in Gondor, due to his challenge of single combat to the childless Eärnur. When Eärnur accepted, he rode to Minas Morgul and was never seen again, leading to the Stewards assuming control of Gondor.
This talk of "the Men of the North" imprisoning the Witch-king after the fall of Angmar completely contradicts everything Tolkien wrote about the character after his defeat and creates massive plot holes (if the Witch-king was imprisoned for all this time, how did Minas Ithil fall? How did Gondor lose its Kings? Who has been preparing Mordor for Sauron's return and leading his forces while he regains power?).
While the inclusion of the Nazgul in the Dol Guldur/Necromancer subplot may seem like a minor and reasonable change, the way they have handled it pretty much butchers the later half of the Third Age.
I want it 'more real'.

t:and i didnt know that fantasy movies didnt have to be 100% real. since fanboys like to complain about CGI in every fantasy movie. so is it with CGI different? since movies are not meant to be real why is it wrong if the CGI shadow is 4 % darker then on the live action plate?
I'm all for this new Format. I like more Frame rates, i got an LED Samsung because I didn't like the motion blur in the old TV.
People always **** on the New and Unfamiliar before giving it more of a chance.
I saw a TV years ago with more frame rates and i couldn't stop starring at it, it was soo expensive, i still haven't seen a TV like that but it felt soo real like they were in a window and not on a television.
I like New and innovative things, I like different, I like progress, i like experimenting. Give me a break people don't like it, sounds like a bunch of old stuck in what there used to cause they can't adjust. I don't want things to stay the same i want it to change.
I can't wait to see the Hobbit shot like this. I want it 'more real'. I need more out of a film experience than just seeing peoples faces stretched out 20feet on a screen.
Once again, people need to stop thinking that The Hobbit will look like the motion smoothing on the TVs at Best Buy. The two are completely different.Reading stuff like this makes me sad. I ****ing hate the motion smoothing setting on new TVs. Messes with my eyes and completely ruins the look and feel of films for me.
I love the "film look". To me that also feels like viewing through a window. But a window into another world.
I don't want to feel like I'm chilling on my couch, looking out my front window and watching things take place on my front lawn like a stage play.
That may seem more "real" because it looks like it's "right there" but at the same time it's going to feel less genuine.