[1][2][3] The most common forms of high motion are NTSC and PAL video (i.e., "normal television") at their native display rates.
[citation needed] Movie film (at the standard 24 frame/s) does not portray high motion even when shown on television monitors.
[dubious – discuss] Television producers found that these higher image rates made certain shots possible that were unacceptable on film.
[citation needed] High motion is often criticized as interfering with the suspension of disbelief, and making it difficult to forget that the viewer is watching actors performing a scene.
This had resulted in less high motion on television and on the internet on Video sharing applications such as YouTube in the early to mid 2010s.
[citation needed] The future presence of digital projectors in theaters opens up the possibility that Hollywood movies could someday include high motion—perhaps in action films intercut with 24 frame/s for non-action scenes.
Director Peter Jackson's three-part Hobbit film series was shot at 48 fps, using the Red Digital Cinema Epic video camera system.