I was reading an article on BBC News about the different approaches to making a film 3D. James Cameron uses a 3D or stereo camera system, as seen in Avatar. Louis Leterrier sent Clash of the Titans to be post-processed from 2D into 3D; same for Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland.
I didn't see Avatar in 3D. Part of me is starting to wonder if I should have. I have, however, seen both Clash of the Titans and Alice in Wonderland in 3D. The former felt fairly subtle, with some scenes making good use of 3D and some feeling fairly flat. The BBC News article notes that Clash of the Titans was rushed through conversion, though ("The film was converted in just eight weeks as opposed to the usual 12 - 15 weeks"). Alice, conversely, was so in-your-face with 3D that I found it quite disruptive for the first half of the film, with vegetation leaping out of the screen at me or simply "blocking" my view. It calmed for the second half and by the battle at the end I felt they had improved their technique and it was very watchable and rounded.
Thing is, I'm not sure that a 25% increase in the price of a ticket is actually worth the stereo vision. Perhaps Avatar would have convinced me?
Sure, I like the fact that images stand out more, or that you have a sense that if you just moved your head a bit you could look round the side of something. I dislike having things "thrown at me" out of the screen, and I find foreground obscuring infuriating and painful on my eyes (seen in Alice when they're racing along a road at one point and there's grass in the foreground getting in the way of seeing what's going on). But I'm not sure that I get into the film any more than I ever did. In any good film, I've always found it pretty easy to zone everything else out and then there's just the screen, almost as though my vision narrows 'til the cinema disappears and there's just what I'm watching. In a way, 3D gets in the way of that because I'm being asked not just to watch but to "experience" watching.
So, I'm ambivalent, tending to slightly unimpressed.
Seen any good 3D films...? By good I mean worth the extra money over a 2D version.
I didn't see Avatar in 3D. Part of me is starting to wonder if I should have. I have, however, seen both Clash of the Titans and Alice in Wonderland in 3D. The former felt fairly subtle, with some scenes making good use of 3D and some feeling fairly flat. The BBC News article notes that Clash of the Titans was rushed through conversion, though ("The film was converted in just eight weeks as opposed to the usual 12 - 15 weeks"). Alice, conversely, was so in-your-face with 3D that I found it quite disruptive for the first half of the film, with vegetation leaping out of the screen at me or simply "blocking" my view. It calmed for the second half and by the battle at the end I felt they had improved their technique and it was very watchable and rounded.
Thing is, I'm not sure that a 25% increase in the price of a ticket is actually worth the stereo vision. Perhaps Avatar would have convinced me?
Sure, I like the fact that images stand out more, or that you have a sense that if you just moved your head a bit you could look round the side of something. I dislike having things "thrown at me" out of the screen, and I find foreground obscuring infuriating and painful on my eyes (seen in Alice when they're racing along a road at one point and there's grass in the foreground getting in the way of seeing what's going on). But I'm not sure that I get into the film any more than I ever did. In any good film, I've always found it pretty easy to zone everything else out and then there's just the screen, almost as though my vision narrows 'til the cinema disappears and there's just what I'm watching. In a way, 3D gets in the way of that because I'm being asked not just to watch but to "experience" watching.
So, I'm ambivalent, tending to slightly unimpressed.
Seen any good 3D films...? By good I mean worth the extra money over a 2D version.