@whitecarnations I find film and television to be a bit choppy. While 24 FPS may be fine for anybody who is neither a gamer nor a bit on the hyper side, I find such low framerates to be somewhere between distracting and eye-hurting, depending on how caffeinated I am.
Note also that the recent popularity of large-screen TVs and monitors makes low framerates even worse. While it used to be that an object would only jump 1/16” between frames which is small enough to at least appear somewhat smooth, the same image will now jump up to ¼” between frames, appearing decidedly jerky and spastic. Have you ever seen people dancing while lit only by a strobe light? How un-smooth it looks?
Gamers generally have a hard time with less than 40 FPS, and I can barely look at a CRT monitor that has a refresh rate of 60Hz; they flicker 2–½ times as fast as a 24FPS movie and yet even that appears very uneven.
The only exception I can think of is if you are going for a faux-retro look (like back when framerates were arbitrary and often uneven) or some other truly artistic effect. If you want to make it look like an amateur shot with an old Super-8 or a cheap cell-phone then a choppy framerate is okay.