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#1 |
Active Member
Apr 2013
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Amazon UK has had this title listed for some time now but I have not seen any discussion about it. Has anyone seen it?
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Thanks given by: | robtadrian (09-20-2015) |
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#4 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Thanks given by: | MercurySeven (09-20-2015) |
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#5 |
Blu-ray Guru
Nov 2014
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I watched about 5 - 10 minutes of this in 2d when it played on tv and it was pretty good, even though it's not normally my sort of thing. I'd been meaning to pick up the 3D disc but last I checked it was selling for more than I was willing to pay.
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#6 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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If this documentary uses old stereocards extensively, I'm buying it.
All 3-D film buffs need to get to know old stereocards. There is an untapped world of 3-D in those images, and the quality -- in terms of both photography and stereo -- is astonishing, easily surpassing 99% of the best 3-D movies. Old stereocards and blu-ray are a perfect marriage. One doesn't even have to make a documentary out of them. Just transfer them in the order taken and printed. Use the original captions. The images tell the story. |
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Thanks given by: |
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#7 |
Senior Member
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Wow. I'd never heard of this series either. Apparently it utilizes hundreds of vintage stereocards, plus newly filmed 3D sequences featuring the presenter, Tony Robinson (who's always good at this sort of thing). And it's 3 hours long.
I've just ordered the UK version. |
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#8 | |
Active Member
Apr 2013
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#9 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Received Discovery Channel Tony Robinson's World War 1 in 3D in todays mail.
![]() First look has the Region B lock symbol on both the case and on the disc and which was the first thing I wanted to double check. The good news is that the Blu-ray 3D has no region coding = Region Free (Will Play in Regions A, B, or C). Last edited by Paul H; 09-28-2015 at 10:57 PM. |
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Thanks given by: |
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#10 |
Senior Member
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Just finished watching this. It's a very good history series, and the 3D photographs are absolutely fascinating. Some are better than others, as you'd expect from such old images, but the majority are beautifully layered and immersive. It's like gazing through a window into frozen moments from the First World War. Depth-wise, a number of them are just jaw-dropping: lines of troops stretch back for miles; dirt and debris from explosions hangs there, seemingly outside the screen; the claustrophobia of the trenches becomes searingly real thanks to the separation of foreground and background. It's startling to see, even experience, history this way.
I do have a few issues with the constant panning and zooming inside the 3D images. The director's guiding us, gradually revealing the depth of the scene or emphasizing certain things in it, and often it works well. It takes you “inside” the images. But to be honest I wanted to see the entire photographs, full-frame, as the original photographers intended. Some of the 3D contrast is lost when you’re only seeing a section of the image at a time. I did get used to that, but I was disappointed they didn’t include a gallery of the complete photos as a special feature on the BD. That would have been awesome. The stereocards (3D photos) are the main attraction here, but the modern day stuff with Tony Robinson has exquisite 3D as well. Really, really strong depth, like David Attenborough’s recent nature series (Galapagos, Conquest of the Skies, Kingdom of Plants, etc). Robinson takes us to various sites in Belgium and France, explores a re-created trench, and even flies in a vintage plane. The 3D brings it all vividly to life. As a re-telling of WW1, it’s not the most exhaustive series out there, but it doesn’t need to be. It’s four episodes long, 3 hours in total. What you get is a solid narrative overview of the war, illustrated by hundreds of stereocards, and backed up by on-location bits and pieces and some lively interviews with war historians. All in glorious 3D. In short, it’s well worth seeking out. |
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Thanks given by: | BleedOrange11 (09-29-2015), kurosawa (12-13-2015), micnic (09-29-2015), Paul H (09-29-2015), Richard--W (09-29-2015), robtadrian (05-21-2019), the13thman (09-29-2015) |
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#11 |
Active Member
Apr 2013
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Thanks a lot for your thoughtful and informative review, MercurySeven. I very much appreciate it!
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#12 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Yes, thanks MercurySeven for your helpful review and thanks for giving the old stereocards a chance. Not many people do. But those who do get blown away.
Even without a supplement of just stereocards, World War 1 3-D is as essential to any 3-D blu-ray collection as House of Wax. |
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Thanks given by: | robtadrian (05-21-2019) |
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#13 | |
Moderator
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