Tom Lowe
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2007
- Messages
- 8,520
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 0
If you don't like 3D, why not just watch the 2D version? A director should be free to film 2D or 3D, based on his artistic ideas.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
that doesn't mean Cameron is right on an aesthetic level.
With the 3D movies I've seen I was very aware of my own perspective in relation to the images, whereas when watching a normal movie I'm simply involved in the movie. You could say that in a 3D movie it feels like every shot is a POV shot. That could work to a filmmaker's benefit with certain films.
I saw Cave of Forgotten Dreams today. That's the first 3D film I've seen where I felt 3D was not only enhancing but crucial to the experience. It records the contours and spaces of a cave that very few people will visit. But I'm tempted to say that 3D enhances spaces and architecture on-screen more than it does people...
Having said that, 3D can definitely enhance people as well - I suggest you check out Penelope Cruz in 3D, her contours were also recorded well![]()
Never say never. Is Martin Scorsese on your list of favorite directors? Is Peter Jackson on it? Tim Burton? Guillermo Del Toro? Michael Bay (OK, probably a bad example....)?
Truth is that most directors, even the most artistic, are ultimately responsive to whatever the business deems necessary.
I've be arguing on the pro side of 3D in this thread, and I have no problem admitting that most of the movies I've seen in 3D sucked ass. In fact, I've only seen 3D done well 3 times.
1. Avatar (which I rate as above average 3D viewing experience)
2. My Bloody Valentine 3D (the only movie I've seen do the jump out at you gimmick right)
3. The Trailer for "Born to be Wild" - Hands down the best use of 3D I've ever seen.
It's that #3 up there that gives me hope that 3D has a future. The picture was nice and bright, and while not every shot worked in 3D, the ones that did where simply breathtaking.
http://www.imax.com/borntobewild/#/video/trailer/orangutans
It was this shot, of the baby orangutan being fed, that I distinctly remember saying "wow." It's flat in 2D, but in 3D the depth of porch, and the people in the frame was amazing. I felt completely engulfed in the shot. No gimmicks here, simply using the tool of 3D to create drama.
What I don't understand is how we can say that 48% of ticket sales generated by 3D is a strong rejection of 3D by the American public?
Avatar was the last 3d film I will ever intentionally see.