Douglas Trumbull

Latest

  • LOCARNO, SWITZERLAND - AUGUST 14:  Douglas Trumbull attends a photocall  during the 66th Locarno Film Festival on August 14, 2013 in Locarno, Switzerland.  (Photo by Pier Marco Tacca/WireImage)

    Farewell Douglas Trumbull, visual effects pioneer

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    02.10.2022

    He produced pioneering visual effects for some of the most important sci-fi movies of the last century, and pushed the limits of what could be achieved with the technology long before CGI arrived.

  • DENVER, CO--OCTOBER 15TH 2010--Movie producer, Douglas Trumbull in Denver Friday October 15th 2010. Andy Cross, The Denver Post  (Photo By Andy Cross/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

    Douglas Trumbull, VFX whiz for ‘Blade Runner’, ‘2001’ and others, dies at 79

    by 
    Amrita Khalid
    Amrita Khalid
    02.08.2022

    The longtime visual effects director was behind some of the most influential sci-fi films of all time.

  • Editorial: Despite shaky 48 fps Hobbit preview, high frame rates will take off

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    05.28.2012

    Well actually, the Hobbit preview wasn't shaky, it was smooth -- maybe too smooth -- and that's the point. "It does take you a while to get used to," Peter Jackson has admitted, referring to the surprisingly fluid motion of his 48 fps movie footage. But is he right to think audiences will even give it a chance? The launch of high frame-rate (HFR) cinema is surrounded by publicity in the run-up to the Hobbit's debut on December 12th, but it equally has a lot going against it. For starters, the film's 48 fps preview wasn't exactly received warmly. On top of that, the video-style appearance of HFR has a long history of being disliked by movie-goers -- past attempts since the 1970s have all flamed out. 85 years after the first 24 fps movies, the same number of frames are still going stubbornly through the gate (digital or otherwise) each second, so that must be what "filmic" is, right? Or will we look back on 24fps as the bad old days? Read on to see if these new/old-fangled frame speeds might survive, and though a 48 fps Hobbit trailer isn't available, we've provided a couple of clips to help you judge what two-dimensional HFR looks like.