While The Hobbit remains locked at 24 FPS at home, other directors have successfully brought true HFR to living rooms. Ang Lee filmed Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk (2016) and Gemini Man (2019) in 120 FPS. Because 60 FPS is a supported standard for 4K UHD Blu-ray, these films were released on physical discs in true 60 FPS, giving home theater enthusiasts a real taste of what native home HFR looks like without relying on unofficial downloads. How to Create Your Own HFR Experience At Home

for home viewing. While director Peter Jackson shot the entire trilogy in this format to improve 3D clarity and motion detail, it has never received a commercial home media release. Why You Can't Download the 48fps Version

Some enthusiasts download a standard 24fps 4K Blu-ray Remux (which is legal if you own the disc) and use software like or DmitriRender to interpolate the video to 48fps or 60fps in real-time. This creates a simulated HFR effect.

Fast camera movements don't judder or blur.

Scanned from the original digital files for incredible 4K clarity.