And even consumer-level cameras have image stabilizing, though some of them don't do a very good job.
Next step: Getting over the "smooth framerates = eewwww, soap opera!" mentality.
I've only seen a 60fps video once now...
I don't know why anyone would want 24fps or 29fps instead of it.
24fps especially (well, 23.976) looks lousy on movie screens when the camera's panning past something, like a fast slideshow rather than a fluid video.
I guess there's hope for that. After all, movies are no longer played back at odd or inconsistent speeds, caused by the camera operator's manual cranking of the film wheel. 😀
I don't mind image stabilization, but don't dare put that higher framerate shit on my TV.
We don't see that way, it looks like shit! Our brain doesn't see in a measurable framerate, true, and constant motion could be said to be even faster, but we have very few high-quality visual receptors for motion, and our own tracking ability is extremely limited. By that, I mean we cannot discern a great amount of detail from an entire scene while also moving our eyes - our range of focus is incredibly limited, in that we can SEE a lot but we can only see in detail in a very very minute portion of our overall field of vision. The further away from that limited portion of our FOV, we get loss of fine image resolution and less accurate imagery. It's accurate because we can track to it whenever we want and fill in the real detail, and we keep our brain updated with both real, perceived, and imagined data - filling in the blanks until we can process the full resolution again.
Result = we can really only resolve what we are focusing on while the rest of the scene is extremely vague.
All that is with constant motion.
Now, I haven't SEEN a full high-production movie shot at a faster framerate, so the raw data actually presented correctly might be much different. Most is either bad production (which clarity of image brings to focus much easier), or the image is converted from slower framerate to a faster framerate; that may be lending to the way it is perceived.
If you could "film" in constant motion, no frames involved, and present that to us on a TV or at the theater, it would look natural. Production values would still be important, but it wouldn't look wrong. Either the camera or our eyes can control focus and see lifelike detail in motion.
Instead, we are presented frozen photography in fast motion. Making that even faster means less motion blur is captured in every single frame. Keep making that faster and faster, the visuals are going to look alien, because most likely what we are watching this motion picture on, is almost entirely centered within our "sharper" FOV. However, just because it's in our FOV doesn't mean we would see the full detail within the entire scene.
Which is fine, except there's a disconnect between reality and what we see in that narrow cone of vision. We expect to only really "see" so much fine detail, and then our eye is thinking it can drink in so much detail but gets confused based on the way the camera pans and the way the motion is acted out within that narrow scope of our visual field.
It's much better trickery to actually capture the motion blur on the frame itself, because combining that with the director's choice of focal lengths and depth (what's the DoF, what's in focus, how much range compression or expansion is there due to focal length as well), if we choose to allow the directory to hold our hand and pull us along for the ride (we force our eyes to keep up with what is in focus, drop our guard when it appears nothing it in focus), it's going to be FAR more effective at drawing us into the experience, and overall feel more natural.
Smooth panning can be beneficial, but the overall result of high framerate with intense action and high-motion scenes is actually far more jarring, it doesn't feel like I'm there at all. In fact, it more and more feels like I'm watching a staged production as opposed to seeing something through a window - which, combined with HD picture and strong surround sound, that's entirely my goal and you can keep your high framerate to yourself, good sir!