Topic: Feature Length Film: Titanic. I need help!

Hi. I was wondering if anyone could help me choose a frame rate to animate my Titanic Movie at.
At the minute I am thinking about 24fps, But I am also considering 15fps. I was wondering if anyone could help me with this. As I usually animate at 15fps, sometimes at 24fps. And at 1 point 48fps! mini/bigsmile
But I think that 24fps will look the best in the finished film. But seeing as I will not have any help animating the film, 15fps seems like an easier option. So, hopefully you can see how I am stuck on this.
Please reply!

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Re: Feature Length Film: Titanic. I need help!

Generally any type of film is shot at 24fps, animated or live action.

The most used brickfilming frame rate is 15fps.

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Re: Feature Length Film: Titanic. I need help!

With brickfilms, the range of motion on minifigures is so small that there is not much signifigant difference between 15 and 24 fps, as far as I can tell.
Don't do 48.

EDIT: Also, good luck!! mini/smile

Re: Feature Length Film: Titanic. I need help!

Ah, I'm always glad to see someone attempt a feature-length brickfilm mini/tongue  As others have said, I would stick to 15fps, because it is far more efficient, particularly for a film of this sort of length.

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Re: Feature Length Film: Titanic. I need help!

I'm gonna be dead honest here, and not too technical.

I don't know you, but many brickfilmers (like me) often get inspired to to a great idea that's in their minds, "oh it's gonna be awesome, it'll be full-length, at 24fps" and they often get about as far as editing 2-5 minutes of it before they start procrastinating more. So if you're really going to finish this, then go for 15fps. Not much of a visual difference between the two, and most likely, attempting 24fps if you're not someone like Mobdeli, is gonna look sucky.

I'm sorry, don't want to burst your inspirational bubble, here, but this has happened to me. I'm still finishing something from 2007, and my animation, editing and effects have greatly improved over time, so having to "downgrade my abilities" for that film is a hard experience in and of itself. Until now, though, I've only cancelled one project, which is good, but that was because I thought hard before attempting any new project.

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Re: Feature Length Film: Titanic. I need help!

Hmm, a conversation like this would go in the PRODUCTION thread.

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