I can't stand the look of 30fps+ in cinematic applications. In other media, such as video games or television, it's fine, but there's something about the look of a movie playing at 30+fps that is extremely offputting to me...it almost imparts a low-budget look in my opinion.
I've been reading about Mirrorless and DSLR video and 24 FPS is the shebang nowadays for this reason... The cinematic way.
I haven't worked at all seriously into the video capabilities of current digital cameras, but I am interested in it... Two devices in one! The snapshooting thing plus the video thing on a small device. I love travelling and while nowadays for me it is a daydreaming activity as a student, I always get to think setting up situations for a trip. My dad always tells me how he brought his small 35mm and a huge camcorder. Now both can be seen in a P&S body with video quality exceeding most amateur needs.
And I think I am more tolerant to these FPS variations, but I haven't studied it closer... I should.
My take on the Hobbit: Interesting film but it looks artificial, videogame like. I've watched the LOTR series and that isn't so. It could well be the FPS.
and from what i remember, the cinemas have already installed new projectors at a gigantic expense in the past few years ..
so i guess the small cinemas (not mega corp ) will probably go under, after another huge dump of $$
Sadly so and with my limited scope, by reading articles, this has been a forced change. And that is something I really dislike.
This year I've barely been to theaters, perhaps watched a couple or three films. It really is due other factors but I'm not bothered to not attend that much nowadays. Sadly, it looks like a glorified youtube to me.
Well, the article I read, and the conversation I had with Douglass Trumbull gave some measure of hope for film. They did not all of the drawbacks mentioned, and two more. At the higher frame rate, tearoffs with acetate films occur frequently and conversion to Estar increases cost and may cause damage to the hardware.
So, perhaps I was just being optimistic.
As for cost of the stock, the storage cost goes down as digital storage runs about 10x film storage and if you store a digital film shot at 60FPS you do have to convert it to film at the same speed. Digital storage would work but would be more expensive and less reliable.
Have high hopes and be optimistic. Thanks for the comments.
PE
Indeed higher FPS would increase the need for film footage for the archiving but of course it wouldn't be comparable to the loss of film print consumption.
I like digital in the advantages it brings to amateurs and lower budget films, giving great quality with a truly budget spending (I am seeing one of the latest $1k still cameras do in excess of what I'd need for travel videoing) but I really dislike the forced conversion that the industry is pushing. However, there is a hardcore film group around hollywood (or so I heard, with some prominent directors) and I'm sure it will continue to be used. If I were a high budget cinematographer I would have no hesitation of using film! (but of course we are in a film based forum so biases apply

)
Then there are the effects of a declining MP industry on the film manufacturing... Kodak.