Auf der Seite die oben angeben ist steht es beschrieben. Du hast recht es ist FlowMotion:
Watch this:
How did they do it ?
Ordinary movie cameras can freeze scenes, but they cannot revolve around the subject when the scene is frozen. They could do it only when the subject is a stationary one, such as a lamppost or something immobile. In this case, because the subject was in full motion, the director couldn't use an ordinary still movie camera. For the three scenes, a special setup called the Flo-Mo (presumably for flow-motion) array was used. It consists of a circular-well, where 35mm SLR still-cameras are placed in the holes you see in the circular wall of the well. You can see the setup in the shot above, where the well is being painted in green for the computer to easily discriminate the subject from the background.
The actors stands in the middle where they performed the moves using wire setups by Hong Kong kungfu director Yuen Wo Ping, seeming to defy gravity. Up to 120 synchronized cameras snap their image at the very same instant, creating a 360 degrees view of the same moment. The image you see above is just one of the 120 images.
The film is processed, and the same frame from the 120 rolls of film were scanned and generated into a single continuous movie clip by computers, where the camera seemed to revolve around the "frozen in time" actor, to which the scene background is then added. Because of the green screen used in the setup, the computers can easily differentiate the actors from the background, "lift" them up digitally and place them in a real-life scene (eg. rooftop or railway scene). And because there are only a maximum of 120 actual frames, computers are used to develop "intermediate" frames between the real frames to make the action flow more smoothly, just like cartoon animation.
This technique was developed for scientific research for motion studies, and this is the first time it has been used in a movie production. And yes... Canon fans, the camera used was the American version of the Canon 5 without the Eye-Control Focusing (known as Canon EOS A2).
Remember, you heard about it first here at "Photography Happenings!!"