It was invented in the 1920s, 90 years ago from 2011. The answer was supplied in an article discussing the 48/60 frames per second digital projector which is being considered for the 2012 release: Peter Jackson's The Hobbit.
24 frames per sec .
The second movie was meant to conclude the anime series.
George Eastman invented film in the sense that he invented photographic film that replaced chemically coated glass or metal plates in the making of still photographs. Thomas Alva Edison invented the movie by working with Eastman to make photographic film suitable for motion pictures, and then by developing the process for photographing staged stories and presenting the results in Nickelodeons..
The idea was first produced in 1995. After a good amount of pre-production (about 2 years) to ensure that the movie would sell once it made it to theaters, it took them 6 months to make the claymation characters. To put it in perspective: It took the animators an entire day to shoot 36 frames (which is just 1-1/2 seconds of film). The final movie is about 77 minutes long and has 110,880 frames. Filming began almost two years before the movie's release. At times, 28 teams of six animators were shooting at the same time. And no, it did not take 10 minutes.
Forty Love
in was invented in 1860's
The movie projector: The "lumiere" brothers (French). As for the phonograph, I dont know.
24 frames per sec .
24x60x2 = 2880 frames 24x60x2 = 172800 frames
1 second of the movie was composed of about 24 frames and the movie was 74 minutes long. So about 106560 frames.
50 FPS, frames per second, is sped up. The normal speed for movies is 25 frames per second. You can fast forward a movie in 30, 50, and 60 frames per second.
At 24 frames per second times 60 seconds equals 1440 frames per minute.
To create the impression of movement, in a computer game, movie, etc., lots of pictures are shown quickly, one after the other. Each individual picture is called a "frame" in this context. A high FPS number results in a smooth animation.
It is very older type of movie projector. At very long back at the evaluation time of movie projection a number of still frames photographed continuously to record a motion was passed through this projector to reflect it on a screen to create an illusion of motion by persistence of vision.
No, a movie projector uses a convex lens.
Although Edison invented a kinetoscope which allowed one viewer at a time, the Lumiere brothers invented the projector to show the film to a theater audience.
Movies created in PhotoBooth are 640 X 480, using H264 compression and run at 15 frames per second (although this varies slightly for each movie).