![]() ![]() This filming speed is twice the current industry standard (24 frames-per-second), and was used to create smoother, more fluid action and improve the visual effect of viewing the movie in 3-D. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey earned a notable place in cinematic history for being the first feature-length movie to be shot and screened at 48 frames-per-second. The boy gave the book rave reviews, and the rest is Hobbit history.Ģ. ![]() Originally conceived as a children’s fantasy story, the book went to print only after publisher Sir Stanley Unwin paid his 10-year-old son to read it. Tolkien initially conceived of the story that would provide the foundation for his Lord of the Rings saga when a single sentence popped into his head: “In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit.” The sentence stuck in his head until he finally began writing the novel that would become The Hobbit, which was eventually published in 1937. ![]() Here are 10 things you might now know about The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey :ġ. To celebrate the arrival of the movie on DVD, Blu-Ray, streaming, as a downloadable file, possibly on VHS, and any other form of home media you can possibly imagine, we have assembled a few facts about the film that you might not know. ![]()
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