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#481 |
Junior Member
Dec 2011
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Interesting discussion...
I don't think the 3D format is going away at all. Once it becomes more mainstream, there will be more titles and lower prices. We love watching movies in 3D, especially the once produced in 3D from the start. I can understand the negative responses from people who already own TV's not 3D. We chose to buy our first HD TV as a 3D because the price and opportunity was right. We got hooked in 3D at the theatre but hated the rip-off prices. Now we are building a collection of fun 3D movies. Of course it is not for everyone so those who have no interest in it should go to another forum and leave this forum to those who own 3D TV's. |
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#482 | ||
Blu-ray Samurai
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The market penetration of 3-D would have to increase exponentially for that to happen. When genres that might be expected to employ 3-D are still debated as to whether this film or that one gets it (see anything by Nolan, for example) it's just tough to see someone greenlight a rom-com in 3-D, saying it would enhance the experience, somehow. This isn't friends or foes in the fan base making these decisions; it's studios and filmmakers, across the board. Quote:
It isn't catching on. I say, ping the source, not damn the skeptical consumer. |
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#483 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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If it were quality 3-D, I'd appreciate the ability to get 3-D glasses with my prescription in them - if they wouldn't charge a fortune for them. I pay premium prices for glasses (there is no reason to go cheap on a medical device) but at the prices of normal 3-D glasses, I can't imagine what a prescription pair would run. Wearing double sets of glasses is just a bad solution for most of the public. Some folks simply don't mind, but it's never going to be the norm. During normal demo testing, my wife and I were able to wear 3-D glasses over our own, which are lightweight and very non-bulky, but we both quickly agreed that wearing both sets for any prolonged period was simply too uncomfortable. |
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#484 | |||
Blu-ray Guru
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The head of Warner Bros. once said something very similar about sound. Say that again when there are no more 3D movies in current release, or in production. Last edited by Dotpattern; 01-08-2012 at 11:40 PM. |
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#485 | |||
Blu-ray Samurai
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It's been very genre-restricted by content providers, another limiting factor. No dramas; nothing in the "Oscar-Worthy" categories; no comedies; no mysteries, only a couple of adventure films (generally geared towards very young audiences), just a very limited field. This restricts what is even available in 3-D, even if prices were lowered and the rest of the pipeline was wide open. Quote:
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Some are concerned that development and availability costs are being passed on to 2-D viewers, probably not the case. But the bigger question - which should be directed to the people who created this format (and they shouldn't get a pass on it) - is why the obvious problems aren't being addressed, by producing higher quality, lower cost, and future-proofing. This is not a new format any more. It's been around for two years, and you're still paying $35-$40 per Blu. The general public is not eagerly adopting this, and they should be able to do this. It's a legitimate topic, I think, and I also think people who aren't entranced by it shouldn't be rude about it - they should point out problems, have their complaints evaluated by their peers for validity, and then present them to content providers and manufacturers as things to be solved, so those guys can make more money, selling what the naysayers will REALLY want to buy. It's out there - you like it, and you're not alone - so civility and common purpose should work. |
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#486 | |
Banned
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Wearing 2 pairs of glasses may not be ideal and a bad solution to some, but that's what's required if you want to watch 3d because that's how currently the technology works and has always worked. Manufacturers can't just click their fingers and magically change the whole foundation of how 3d technology works, so what do you propose they do about it? Complaints are understandable if someone actually does like 3d but not the glasses, but in most circumstances the people complaining don't even like 3d anyway, glasses or not, so they are just whinging about something for the sake of it. At the end of day IMO 3d glasses are just an accessory which is required to use it, no different to needing a controller to be able to play a console game or a gas bottle so you can use your BBQ to cook meat. Yes those things don't make the experience of using the product uncomfortable for some, but they are still required to be able to use the product never the less. So if you don't like using the accessories that are needed to work a product, then simply don't use it. 3d glasses aren't just an inconvenience that have been introduced for no reason, they are an equal part in the technology and 3d currently wouldn't work without them, just like cars and petrol etc. There are other products on the market where you have to wear something to able to use it, such as a welding mask, I'm sure they aren't very comfortable especially after a couple of hours either, but wearing them is just something you have to accept if you want or have to use a welder. Last edited by Cevolution; 01-09-2012 at 12:10 AM. |
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#487 | |
Special Member
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#488 | |||||
Blu-ray Samurai
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It is not my decision, or yours, to use 3-D for specific genres, or for everything filmed; it is a cost-benefit analysis of the artist, and if Woody Allen decides to make his next film in 3-D, more power to him. I don't think 3-D would add much to My Dinner With Andre, newsreels about the Kennedy assasination, or some conversion of It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World. No need to describe me as a Neanderthal for saying so. Further, 3-D still isn't perfect - far from it. As a fan of photorealism, I understand the desire to see everything on film as it really is, and my best example in 2-D is Lawrence of Arabia, at the well with his guide, and we see a small figure in the distance. A shot rings out from the figure, who takes perhaps a full minute to be close enough to clearly discern who it is. Would an accurate 3-D rendering have improved this scene? Perhaps, but I have yet to see anything as impressive in 3-D (though the Imax Grand Canyon work is very, very good). Would it have been less impressive without color, or widescreen, or sound? Yes, these were necessary components, to carry the impact of the scene. Are studios doing work this stunning for romantic comedies, or animated stuff like Megamind? Not even close. So my statement that not much would be added to Sleepless In Seattle by 3-D is based on watching a man, riding a camel, firing an ancient carbine hundreds of yards away, and the scene being a success. It's not the maunderings of a Luddite, wishing Leonardo had carved the Mona Lisa, instead of just painting it on flat canvas. Quote:
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I get your point, though. I've gotten two movies since November. One is an archive release. There's precious little out there that I haven't either already purchased, or dismissed as not worth it. For 3-D, with a much smaller pie to slice, it's even worse, and some of the more venal producers out there do a cheap production, slap 3-D stickers on it, and wait for the money to roll in. Turns out that doesn't work. We won't see Green Hornet 2. Quote:
I'm looking for manufacturers and producers to give a hoot as much about their work as a brain surgeon at work, or a general at war, and I am not seeing that. I'm also waiting for someone to prove me wrong that a standard, "King's Speech" type movie will be enhanced by a well done 3-D presentation, without "Comin At Ya!" stunts. I'm not really impressed by the grumblins of a 19th century man questioning 20th century technology - I was one of the first to adopt Blu, run a network in my home, and I'm a cautious but relentless early adopter. 3-D Lords Of The Universe need to show some real commitment before I show mine, especially with these price tags. |
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#489 | ||||||
Blu-ray Samurai
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It has nothing to do with valid opinions. You guys bought it, you like it, and I'm glad you did. I hope you didn't look for some other motivations for my questions. We found wearing two pairs of glasses for more than a few minutes uncomfortable. I really can't see where that relates to you at all. In fact, I thought your comments were helpful. Quote:
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Pilots have custom glasses. Shooters in gun competitions have glasses. Divers have glasses. And race car drivers, and jewelers, and lots of other folks. Did they have to click their fingers and summon magic to get them? Quote:
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#490 | |
Banned
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I agree that there are a few factors that are hurting 3d's success but I think the glasses are at the bottom of the list, and is nowhere near the main concern or reason for it. I don't think having to buy HT equipment which is 3d compatible is the problem either, maybe to people who purchase equipment to keep for 15 years, but not to people who upgrade their gear every 3-5 years or so. We are just about to hit the 3rd gen of 3dtv's now, and imo based on the fact that 3d was introduced to HT technology just 2 short years ago, I think it's doing ok. History has shown that other HT technologies have followed the same suit in their infancy, give it another 3 years and then I think there will be something to talk about. Until then I think having this conversation is ridiculous. I apologise for not including a reply to your whole prescription 3d glasses comment, I meant to but I accidentally left it out. Samsung in fact do currently offer prescription active 3d glasses (which are the only company who currently do as far as I know) and have done so for almost a year, though I'm unaware of what they cost. |
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#491 | |||||
Banned
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(Yeah, and it'll be more interesting once Blu-Dog lets anyone ELSE post...)
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(Our greatest enemy at the moment, is that we are living under the despotic self-styled tyrant rule of the Kings of Wishful Thinking... ![]() I prefer to be pleasantly cynical--okay, maybe "realist" is a better term--and think that as long as there are studios, for the moment, there will be studios using 3-D to cram us into the theaters for that all-important box-office weekend, and as long as there are studios using 3D to cram us into theaters for box-office weekends, there will be Blu-3D as an excuse to sell as many different home-video editions of the same movie at Best Buy on day one. Yep, we're suffering under those rich corporations for now, with no end in sight...Makes ya feel like one of the 99%, don't it? ![]() Quote:
![]() (But yes, "Cave of Forgotten Dreams" could be considered an "arthouse" title.) And if we DIDN'T have The Lion King, Beauty & the Beast and Toy Story 1&2 last quarter, I suppose we'd be getting the old birth-of-Blu-ray argument of "It's a ripoff, all they want to release is new movies for short-attention fanboys, and let the old catalog archive rot; don't they even remember movies from more than three years ago?"? Quote:
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![]() Remember when we used to call ardent HD-DVD warriors "Rootkits", because of their holy faith in their one "secret weapon" word when they were trying to persuade us that Blu in itself must be a failure/swindle because it was Sony's idea and Sony Was Sneaky and Evil? Punishing the technology because of old tangentially-related side grudges not directly related to the format itself....Weren't those days SILLY? ![]() Quote:
Nowadays, instead of Talladega Nights going head-to-head against Star Trek:TOS, all we had at the beginning were studios taking hostages in the Exclusive Wars--The public just wanted to see a mainstream 3D movie to experiment on their first player, and figure out what the heck brand to buy, just as soon as the private three-way deathcage match between Avatar, Shrek and the Mad Hatter was over with. Unlike the Format Wars--since there were no competing 3D formats--instead of a defeated Toshiba in the bunker (yes, some of us remember how those YouTube Hitler videos were first invented), we instead had Samsung offering ceasefire peace-talks in the hopes of a universal glasses format...As they realized that taking escalating hostages doesn't create "winners", just three losers who aren't selling something the public CAN afford to buy. Quote:
Once people accept the solved problem, they don't like feeling they're "apologizing" for, or hampered by, any new limitations that keep them from reproducing the experience completely--We watch a movie at home to reconstitute the experience of going to a theater, but nobody ever said "Screw the theaters, I'm watching Gone with the Wind on my iPad!" At the risk of sounding like Spencer Tracy from "Inherit the Wind", every new invention comes with an imperfect limitation, and that's been the case with forty years of home theater: - Television gave us "You can watch movies in your living room!...BUT, you'll have to watch them with commercials, and pretty much watch what we feel like showing." - VHS/Beta gave us "You can choose what movies to watch in your living room any time!...BUT, you'll have to watch them in a linear progression, fast-forward several minutes to find a scene, and spend ten minutes rewinding them when you're finished--Oh, and the quality will degrade slightly every time you watch." - Laserdisk gave us "You can watch movies in long-lasting better quality than VHS, and skip forward or back through chapters...BUT, you can only enjoy them on one certain machine, you'll have to watch them on 12" LP's, it'll take you about four or five of them to watch a Criterion classic, and you'll be in an expensive collector's niche because the studios gave up on us by the time we caught on." - DVD gave us "You can watch movies in crystal clarity on a laserdisk the size of a CD-Rom, with more room for bonus features, and you can play them on your computer--BUT, how good could the quality be compared to theaters, when it's still playing on the state of television resolution today?" - Blu-ray and HDTV gave us "You can watch movies in new high-resolution clarity exceeding your local theater--BUT, that's unless you want to watch 'Avatar', of course, and then you're pretty well screwed for watching the 2-D version and just remembering how neat it looked in the 3-D theaters." Now, cue the folks saying "Watch, Samsung will come to the rescue with that no-glasses screen they're working on, and then I won't have to wear those stupid things over my bifocals!" Possibly, with a little innovation, they might come up with a non-handheld sized screen....Not holding my breath, but not ruling it out. And if it works, I'll take a look, and maybe throw out my $99 rechargeable glasses. That's the psychology of the acceptance of progress: We accept the highest current level of technology if no better offer is available, but nobody likes to be a But-head. ![]() Last edited by EricJ; 01-09-2012 at 01:07 PM. |
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#492 | |
Special Member
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#493 | ||||||||||||
Blu-ray Guru
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So was VHS to DVD, and projection TV to HDTV, and DVD to Blu-ray. Quote:
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I honestly don't think anyone cares if you show your commitment or not. 3D movies are moving on with or without you. Last edited by Dotpattern; 01-09-2012 at 05:26 AM. |
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#494 |
Active Member
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Some of my favorite movies are black and white. Color is good too but there is also no difference in ticket/BD pricing between the two.
I don't have preference over widescreen or square but because the films are framed in widescreen I eventually purchased a widescreen TV to keep the aspect ratio. However, when I did that the square TV's were not hi-def so I don't consider that "Extra Money" for the gimmick. What makes me most upset is that I don't have choices. Transformers special features are only on the 3D? B.S. Why make me buy the 3D (does me no good with my present setup) just for special features (which probably are not in 3D format.) That is a cheap ploy and I am voting with my feet by not purchasing either (I really want to see it again so I will probably break down soon. ![]() |
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#495 |
New Member
Dec 2009
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And do you know what one of the best things about 3d tv's are?
we get to watch 2D stuff too. This summer prometheus is released, shot nativley in 3d by one of the worlds greatest directors, who by all accounts has sworn to only film in 3d from now on,,,and i would be gutted if i had spent thousands of pounds on sub-standard equipment which wont allow me to watch a movie THE WAY IT WAS MEANT TO BE VIEWED. |
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#496 | |||
Blu-ray Guru
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When Paramount/Dreamworks and Michael Bay announced Transformers 3 on Blu-ray, they specifically stated that they would first release the movie-only, and then later release the 3D version with all the special features. This may be a cheap ploy, but at least they were up front about it. Someone who doesn't own a 3DTV and wanted the special features could buy the 3D version and still watch the movie in 2D. Then, if that person eventually bought a 3DTV, they would not have to purchase the movie again. Sounds like strategic, forward thinking to me. |
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#497 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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I have no desire for 3D, but the GT30 I bought this summer has it, so I'll watch the occasional movie IF I can get it for a price comparable to the non-3D version. It's a novelty, at best, for me. Try as you might, "wanting" 3D to become mainstream will not make it so, nor will it change the feelings of people like me. It's obvious from the article in the OP (and other similar articles) that (so far) the majority of consumers feel the same way about home 3D. Will this change over time? Who knows, but manufacturers are not going to continue with a format that appears only to cater to a small (but vocal) segment of consumers. Last edited by My_Two_Cents; 01-10-2012 at 01:21 PM. |
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#498 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Let's wait a few years before declaring 3D at home a failure or success. We're in a down economy, and 3DTVs haven't been around for very long.
We also have to take into account the sales of 3D Blu-Rays and 3D on-demand content. I bet a lot of people who will end up buying 3DTVs in the future didn't necessarily want 3D specifically, but got it as a bonus, since it doesn't add that much to the cost of a new TV. The number 3DTVs is one thing. How much they actually use the 3D feature is another. |
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#499 |
Blu-ray Knight
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It would help if there was more 3D content available on the networks.
Give us the Super Bowl in 3D. Give us the Academy and Grammy Awards in 3D. Give us the 2012 London Summer Olympics in 3D. Give us the Indy 500 in 3D. Give us Lady Gaga in 3D. Give us Wheel of Fortune in 3D. etc. |
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#500 | ||
Banned
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(Blu-Dog's been taking his exact same arguments over to the Smackdown thread where it's allowed, and the B/W & Color metaphor seems to have sprung up from the posters there as well.) When I got my set--came into some money last summer, and wanted to upgrade the dinky lil' 720p I'd had for five years--I knew enough to want to be prepared this time, and got a set that could show 3D if it had to. Lately, it's been having to a lot. ![]() Quote:
[Show spoiler] Over here, ESPN-3D was a good starter, but started too early, was alone in the wilderness, and paid the price. 3Net took up the idea of live golf-finals in 3D, and let its viewers write in--Most of the tech-savvy viewers were amused (...golf?? ![]() Right now, we're down to 3Net carrying the satellite-network burden, but then, they have Sony, Discovery and IMAX backing them to sell. (Disney's the other industry booster, but they're probably going to lick their ESPN wounds for a while before trying again.) For now, you can now catch just about all the original 3Net channel series (Bullproof, Live Fire, etc.) available on PSN Store--It's not classy, but at least it's airing. Last edited by EricJ; 01-09-2012 at 09:37 PM. |
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3dtv, fad |
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