![motion smoothing motion smoothing](https://64.media.tumblr.com/4fbef4425e6ab9646b100cce4c781a79/tumblr_p7bons2of21w0y51zo1_1280.gif)
#Motion smoothing tv#
which make it a point to reflect real life, it's obvious that they need to do that, that's why almost all of them are shot in 60fps or 50fps (for PAL countries).īottom line, everything that is shot it 24p should be experience in 24p, everything else from Gaming, to TV stuff like sports, news, game shows, etc. Of course for soap-operas, reality TV, live TV, etc. Movies don't need to look like real life, they need to provoke feeling and sentiment and let the viewer add in some dots to it all. Movies in general are also referred to as "cinematic arts". If that works for you, go ahead, but you are not watching Game of Thrones as the director intended it to be watched.Īfter all, fast moving objects don't judder like that in real life, they just blur a little. This introduces artifacts in the picture, and can be almost compared to the TV running an autotune filter on the audio. It's mostly noticable on long, panning shots, where the movement seems to be not smooth.Īs for why TrueMotion and the like is not recommended, it must be stressed that it does not only smooth the video, it digitally alters them by creating whole new frames to fill in the "missing" ones to achive the proper framerate. Stuttering is simply the result of the low framerate cinema is shot in.
#Motion smoothing movie#
Jitter can easily be provoked by playing a movie from a pc set to output 30hz if you want to see what it looks like. It makes some frames stay on screen longer than other frames, resulting in a weird (to some, unnoticable to others) jitter. Judder is an artifact from converting one framerate to another, e.g. If so, just use truemotion on whatever setting you are comfortable with. If by judder you mean stutter, you're probably just sensitive to it. If it's actual judder, try enable "real cinema" and make sure your blu-ray player outputs 24 fps. It judders so much that my eyes actually hurt. I would encourage you to try those settings. As per RTINGS advice leaving it enabled with De-Blur 0 and De-Judder 2 is just enough to take the edge off judder without any accompanying Soap Opera Effect and without introducing obvious picture artifacts. Consequently I agree with you that with motion smoothing completely disabled the OLED 24fps experience is not satisfactory. Also, this 24fps judder can be more pronounced on an OLED display because the pixels snap instantly to their lit values from one frame to the next rather than the more typical gradual fade in or out of other display technologies. Usually for movies, directors of photography are careful to limit panning shots (which can look the most juddery) to particular speeds which play nicely with 24fps, but often content gets this wrong which may exacerbate your sense that it's too juddery without motion smoothing. It's just the way our eyes and brain work. If you increase the frame rate you lose this and the image looks more like a live feed, details are very evident even in motion and everything suddenly looks like a soap opera rather than that dreamy movie look. A bit like how you only really see part of your field of view in detail but your brain reconstructs the rest. partly because your brain is doing some of its own reconstruction on the image as it's processing it. 24fps is a sweet spot because motion in the resulting image blurs just enough that it ends up with a strange dreamy quality which is forgiving of detail etc. Apparently due to the persistence of our visual perception, the minimum frame rate to reproduce convincing motion is around the low 20 fps. He also does a good job of explaining the reason movies use 24fps too.
![motion smoothing motion smoothing](https://www.gamespecifications.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Best-COD-Warzone-Graphic-Settings.jpg)
whole bits of Tom Cruise's body missing during a high motion rooftop scene, shimmering on non-moving edges: Vincent Teoh (HDTVtest on YouTube) has a good video which explains it, using examples of the artifacting e.g. And let's face it, if you've spent the money on an OLED, and are posting on Reddit, you are probably the type of person who will see them :) They are averaged and if you look more critically at areas of motion on screen you will see smudging and interpolation mistakes that will start to annoy you once you see them. However, you can't reconstruct frames that weren't there. Superficially the smoothed picture looks more fluid.