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#16581 | |
Senior Member
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#16583 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() Well, it’s not ‘presumed’, it’s definite. What is/was somewhat upsetting to me was that no exact street date was supposed to be listed on a certain retailer’s pre-order page until after the official announcement from the studio. You see, many people worked very hard toward completing this project and I think they deserve the opportunity to toot their own Blu-ray horn first, if only momentarily in a press release, without the information being diluted or losing its impact secondary to a North America’s retailer’s street date listing. As to GC, few folks may be aware of the back story but, he was specifically requested by Marty to do the Q&A at Blu-Con 2.0, which I think speaks for itself as to the mutual respect for each other’s work ![]() http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X9d1Z...eature=related |
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#16584 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#16585 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#16586 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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As a wee young thing, my parents took me to the Preakness (back when we lived in Maryland) the day Secretariat won that race ![]() I had tears in my eyes back then and subsequently, many years later upon viewing the Blu-ray last Tuesday night. ![]() |
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#16587 | |
Special Member
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#16588 | |
Special Member
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![]() (My 11-year old daughter has been giving me an earful about wanting this flick. I regretted it was not available until after the holidays.) |
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#16589 | |
Senior Member
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#16590 | |
Power Member
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Kudos for posting the link to The Social Network screenplay in PDF.
Been pretty busy lately and not able to keep up with all the discussions. Walter Murch and Roger Ebert's salvo on 3D has been a topic of discussion over at Film-Tech. 3D in movie theaters is far from perfect, but 3D really seems like it is here to stay and that will force the technology to improve. There is far more interest in 3D now than ever before in film history. The current "fad" in 3D has easily surpassed all the previous periods where Hollywood studios dabbled in 3D (1950's, 1980's, etc.) and it seems to have grown beyond just being a fad. It's still possible for Hollywood movie studios, commercial movie theaters and electronics companies to ruin a good thing and turn off the general public to 3D. I think the studios need to cut it out with the 2D>3D conversions and just shoot the live action movies they intend for 3D release in native stereo-scopic 3D. The general public is experiencing some sticker shock with the premiums some theaters are charging. Those theaters must improve their level of technology, atmosphere and showmanship to justify the high price tag. Standard multiplex procedure isn't going to fly. Theater operators need to seriously study how successful restaurants are run and emulate that. You get away with delivering McDonald's quality at a Ruth's Chris Steakhouse price. The electronics companies have to get off it already with the insanely stupid exclusive Blu-ray 3D movie bundles with HDTV sets and BD3D players. The practice is keeping a lot of customers sitting on the fence undecided. Or they're just buying a 2D only setup instead. Customers are further confused by differences & possible drawbacks in passive/polarized glasses versus active shutter glass based systems. 3D gaming may end up being the real thing that cements full color 3D into home theater rather than Blu-ray 3D movies if the current nonsense continues. Quote:
True IMAX is designed to fill much of your periphreal vision. But you can't move too close to the screen to do the same thing in a digital 3D equipped theater. I did that once and the movie trailer for Coraline made my eyes go wonky. During the trailer a knitting needle pokes through fabric toward the viewer. In the 3D sweet spot zone the effect works well. When you're sitting too close the needle splits in two and you feel like you're going cross-eyed! |
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#16591 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Hi Bobby. In case you missed some of my previous posts during your absence, the same concept (i.e. a visual comfort zone regarding the “convergence/focus issue”) is also applicable to TV viewing of 3D material rendered for home viewing.
Namely, as production values are refined and experience is gained, *best/recommended practices* are/will be implemented for rendering home media product, be it Blu-ray movies or broadcast regarding positive and negative parallax conflicting with accommodation (focusing), like so –https://forum.blu-ray.com/insider-di...ml#post4200165 And another important pertinent real-world observation noted and experienced by stereographers and 3D filmmakers is that over time (hours and hours of watching 3D content) they even become accustomed or tolerant to the “convergence/focus issue” (see paragraphs 3 and 4 here – https://forum.blu-ray.com/insider-di...ml#post4094231 completely contrary to the notion put forward by Roger E. that “it doesn't work with our brains and it never will”. |
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#16592 |
Banned
Feb 2009
Toronto
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#16593 | |
Special Member
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Region B
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Last edited by 4K2K; 01-31-2011 at 06:27 AM. |
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#16594 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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#16595 |
Special Member
![]() Feb 2008
Region B
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Same projectors, with a modification, and 50% more film according to the article.
Last edited by 4K2K; 01-31-2011 at 05:25 AM. |
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#16596 | |
Active Member
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I took my five year old daughter to see Yogi Bear - first show of the day, 11:30am in the morning. Cost of two tickets, $19.50. Add on basic popcorn and soda, $27.50. For Yogi Bear. In a matter of months, I'll be able to own the movie and watch it multiple times for years for less than it cost to see it in theaters (and with a one-year-old in the house as well, I'm sure I will see it more multiple times than I care to count). I'm not knocking Yogi Bear, although it's an easy target for some. It is the most G-rated of G-rated movies I've seen in a long time, and I love it for that. Still, I paid $27.50 to see a movie where I accurately told my wife the whole plot before I even saw the trailer. There are only two types of movies I'm willing to pay $27.50 or more for two tickets - kids movies my children will enjoy, so I can see them get sucked into the magic of movies, and movies that absolutely must be seen on the big screen. I'll even concede there might be a time where 3D might be a reason why a movie must be seen on the big screen, but I'd argue that for most of them, the same number of people would see them regardless. Ironically, the reason more movies are being made in 3D is the same reason why it's quickly losing its pull in theaters. They want a reason for people to not rely on their home theaters, then they push the movies to home in 3D so you still don't have to go to the movies to see them. |
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#16597 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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I would like the 3D mindset to slowly evolve beyond some peoples’ perception and prognostications that 3D is/will only be worthwhile for major *event* type motion pictures. As an example, personally for me, I would love seeing a short independent documentary showing glass blowing in 3D
![]() [For a sense of how deep 3-D might be one day, consider the latest 3-D film and TV projects, like the ones by Jed Weintrob’s Arena Films 3D. These are not thrill-a-minute blockbusters for the roller-coaster set. They’re documentaries and independent fiction films. As Weintrob told me by e-mail, “Most people assume that 3-D works best for ‘big’ event films, concerts and IMAX-style documentaries, but I have actually found that some of the most gorgeous 3-D imagery has been in ‘small’ dramatic scenes and intimate moments in the real world.” Earlier this month, I saw some of Arena’s work in postproduction in Los Angeles. Editing broadcast-¬quality high-def 3-D involves synching up two digital “reels” — painstakingly shot by the company’s proprietary camera systems — and adjusting the convergence of the two images to heighten the 3-D effect. Achieving this near-convergence ensures that, when seen through glasses on a new 3-D TV, the image appears beautiful and not nauseating. The film I saw is an hourlong episode of “Experience 3D,” which will appear later this year on 3net, a new 3-D channel to be introduced by Discovery Communications, Sony and IMAX. I couldn’t believe my eyes. The episode documents, among other things, a voyage on the Clearwater, a boat built by Pete Seeger as a replica of a 19th-century sloop, up the Hudson River. Without the glasses, the image looks like one you would see drunk. With the glasses, the ship comes into brilliant relief — but the sparkling river is the real showpiece. The Hudson looks as it must look to sailors on calm days: a highway so supportive and broad and horizontal you think you could walk on it. In 3-D, a river does not look like an extension of the sky the way it often does in movies and watercolors; it looks like an extension of the earth, with which it shares a plane. A revelation.] |
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#16598 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#16599 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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But, I’m personally far more interested in this new tech…http://broadcastengineering.com/news...124/index.html - of which they’ve already built a working prototype. |
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#16600 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Like so? – https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Anima.../17558/#Review. Keep an eye out for the future work of D.P. Adam Arkapaw because he’s a very gifted young cinematographer (still in his 20’s, only having graduated film school in ’05 or ’06), who has the potential to accomplish much in his career.
His C.V. - http://www.adamarkapaw.com/cv.html though could stand being updated at least a tad, to include Blind Company and Animal Kingdom (the later along with True Grit being my favorite cinematographic picks of the 2010 litter) but, I guess the guy is too busy shooting fine-looking images. He’s got a good creative eye. |
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