Evinger
Prominent Member
As you said, an interesting debate. I would suggest that the amount of unconscious movement one's eyes have to do watching a Movie is quite a factor.
For example, there is a scene at the beginning of The Last Jedi where there is a long, fairly slow, right to left pan where I particularly notice the Judder.
We have an LG B7 55" & the viewing distance is just under 3 meters, so the eyes have to move very little to take in everything. On seeing this scene again at the Cinema, the judder was there but I really only picked up on it because I was "waiting" for it & so my eyes were not darting about. But normally your eyes are bouncing all over the place on a big screen like that, so you don't stay with the pan.
I can't stand watching a Movie on a TV set to "full soap opera", but I am really interested to see a Movie where it is purposefully filmed at this higher frame rate.
For example, there is a scene at the beginning of The Last Jedi where there is a long, fairly slow, right to left pan where I particularly notice the Judder.
We have an LG B7 55" & the viewing distance is just under 3 meters, so the eyes have to move very little to take in everything. On seeing this scene again at the Cinema, the judder was there but I really only picked up on it because I was "waiting" for it & so my eyes were not darting about. But normally your eyes are bouncing all over the place on a big screen like that, so you don't stay with the pan.
I can't stand watching a Movie on a TV set to "full soap opera", but I am really interested to see a Movie where it is purposefully filmed at this higher frame rate.