I think you need to get back to the nursing homeBogusMeatFactory wrote:It was like that the entire time though. It never stopped even during the slower scenes. Didn't like it.Sload Soap wrote:Yeah it was supposed to be like that. From what I've read George Miller would drop the frame rate below the usual 24fps at certain points to make the action seem more sketchy or intense. About 50% of the film was altered in that way. I thought it was done as visual clue to Max's jittery state of mind (along with the more unsubtle ghosts that haunt him) but apparently I read too much into it.BogusMeatFactory wrote:I watched the new Mad Max film and could not enjoy it for a single second. Why you may ask? Well, the film was sped up... or at least, I hope it was sped up to around 1.25x speed, because seriously, things were making zero sense. For those that have seen the film, I am going to ask some questions in spoiler tags here to see if you saw or experienced the same thing as I did.
I seriously felt like in the action sequences that things were going so fast to the point where it made no sense. You would see something zoom up to the camera and then explode and you were left scratching your head. I complained at the ticket office and wanted a refund, but they said it was at the normal speed and wouldn't give me a refund. I thought I was going crazy. I was seeing the pennants on all the cars going insanely fast, even when motionless, saw the clouds and sand just going ballistic in moments where they shouldn't have, saw the slow motion scenes as moving almost at a normal speed. If it was supposed to be like that...whatever.
I think they did that during the action scenes in Kingsman The Secret Service too. It's just what some movies do now. I like it, when it fits a particular movie's style.




