Misuse of 3D lenses to Blame for Dim Movies?
I think poor writing is to blame for dim movies
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I think that 3D should be done away with all together
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Huh, so it really is widespread theatre management incompetence. As I said a few weeks ago about the Thor issue, I would not have put my money there.
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why not Ironik, it's most likely the reason.
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Actually, it's about combating piracy. Take your glasses off when watching s 3D movie -- there's no way anyone could record that and pass it off as even a marginally-watchable pirate copy. Stealing the source material does you no good, either, until home 3D becomes prevalent.
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Honestly the only problem I have with the 3D pricing model is that you get charged extra either way. I've been to some theaters in Hong Kong recently and here they make you buy the glasses separately (which you can reuse with no penalty), and charge you the same flat rate for all shows, 2D or 3D, and I would love to see that get picked up in the US.
I figure the next big move after 3D is restricted VR where you can see all that is happening in the room instead of just a minor fraction of it or experience the movie in first person. Imagine being trapped in a person's mind for 2 hours. The technology after that would have to be where the movies are more real than reality.
I am not certain if 3D lenses causes 3D movies to dim, but I do know that it is mostly the 3D glasses fault due to polarization. Would make more sense to have the same projector used to project 2D and 3D movies than having to switch out a lens each time since people forget. If you take 2 3D glasses and rotate one of the lenses, then all light is blocked off. Regular 3D glasses reduce the image intensity by 50%.
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Actually, it's about combating piracy. Take your glasses off when watching s 3D movie -- there's no way anyone could record that and pass it off as even a marginally-watchable pirate copy. Stealing the source material does you no good, either, until home 3D becomes prevalent.
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Actually no. You're always going to have a large group of people who dislike or simply can't tolerate 3D in movies (I'm perilously close to that myself).
And the likelihood that ALL movies are going to go solely 3D is...farfetched.
Sure, it probably means a few less theater rooms that need to be scouted for surreptitious cam'ing. But as has been seen for much of the last 20 years. The theater chains only put the absolute minimum effort into their operations so as to maximize profits. Until something is all but FORCED on them, change doesn't come slowly even. It comes "not at all".
As such, they're not going to replace their "I could give a *BLEEP!*" minimum wage workers with well paid, diligent employees. They "couldn't afford" it.
Probably because 3D is nothing more than a gimmick.. It's not about improving the film, it's about improving the bottom line for the theater..
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Just because we haven't seen 3D used properly yet (which is debatable, Avatar had amazing 3D), doesn't mean we won't.
The biggest problem so far is that most "3D" films aren't filmed in 3D, but converted... poorly. This is the equivalent of making a silent film and then dubbing in other actor's voices or making a black and white film and colourising it.
If you do a good job, it'll be fine, if you do a bad job it'll be horrible. Bad jobs are cheaper.
Actually, it's about combating piracy. Take your glasses off when watching s 3D movie -- there's no way anyone could record that and pass it off as even a marginally-watchable pirate copy. Stealing the source material does you no good, either, until home 3D becomes prevalent.
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Its more a money grab for the theaters and studios. They can charge more for a theater to show a 3d movie (hence why now more showing in 3d are availbile then 2d this summer) and theaters make more money off charging you for glasses.
Personally next 3d movie i see im going to keep my glasses and then try and use them again. In my area atleast, they dont charge more for the ticket, they seperate the cost between a ticket and glasses, so personally i feel if you keep you glasses i should be able to buy a ticket and normal costs and tell them i dont want to buy glasses this time. Infact i am willing to bet at some point the encouragement to recycle what is a re-usable product is going to catch up to theater owners and some endevoring group of lawyers will see dollar signs in going after them in a class action lawsuit.
Colour and Sound were both accused of being gimmicks when they were invented.
Just because we haven't seen 3D used properly yet (which is debatable, Avatar had amazing 3D), doesn't mean we won't. The biggest problem so far is that most "3D" films aren't filmed in 3D, but converted... poorly. This is the equivalent of making a silent film and then dubbing in other actor's voices or making a black and white film and colourising it. If you do a good job, it'll be fine, if you do a bad job it'll be horrible. Bad jobs are cheaper. |
In most cases it adds nothing to a movie not intended to be filmed in 3d. Even as big of a star wars fan that i am, i am debating on attending those conversions. If not for the fact my son has never been able to see the originals on the theater screen, i probably wouldnt consider it at all.
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3D won't be universally accepted until the technology actually works for everyone. Right now, you need the glasses and that's a stumbling block. Also, many people get headaches or are nauseated by the effect.
There are designs for direct view 3D TV sets, but I can't say how good they look. As I understand it, they also have viewing angle and size limitations and aren't yet applicable to movie theaters.
All current 3D technologies depend on a trick -- presenting a different image to each eye -- rather than actually rendering a "solid" 3D image that you can view directly with your own eyes.
What's the difference? If you watch a contemporary 3D film and move from one side of the screen to the other, you'll see the same image from every angle. In a real 3D presentation walking from one side of the image to the other would show you the left side of a character's face in profile, then the face straight on, then the character's right profile.
The problem is, directors wouldn't want to use real 3D, because they couldn't control the exact presentation of the image to all viewers. They also wouldn't be able to play the "jump out of the screen" trick in a real 3D system that projects the image in a tank or on a stage.
When you come right down to it, 3D isn't really very important. When we view real life the 3D effect is extremely small -- our retinas are basically flat and the parallax effect at the distance we sit from a theater screen is vanishingly small. That is, the distance between our eyes is a couple of inches and we often sit 50 to 100 feet away from the screen. Only when we get really close to things do our eyes actually perceive two substantially different images.
Systems like IMAX give you a more immersive experience without the need for glasses. Being surrounded by the image gives a more visceral sensation than having sharks pop out of the screen at you. But that system has its own problems, too -- the curvature of the screen often distorts the image.
Until the distortion problems are resolved I'm not going to bother with 3D. And that's going to be another two or three generations of technology, at a minimum.
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You may try to argue it's a piracy counter measure, but it's actually it promotes it.
There is always going to be one theater that does things right and they are going to have a pirate that gets a good quality of a movie. With theater only offering crappy 3D for more money which is reduced quality imo for most films because the hassle with the glasses and the lack of ability to do anything good with 3D OR reduced quality 2D versions people are finding they aren't willing to deal with the crappy crapped up 3d glasses, crappy brightness, crappy gimmick effects, crappy seats, or crappy viewing audiences when they can get a reduced quality pirated version from the comfort of their own homes.
Personally I think theaters are dumb in this era. And the only reason they are still around is because people think that it's a bad thing to get rid of jobs. Jobs that aren't needed SHOULD go away. The problem is that when a job is removed that savings that the company gets isn't reflected in the cost the customer pays so that when a machine takes a person job the price stays the same, the employer makes more money, but their consumers make less and can't buy their goods or don't see them as worthwhile. Theaters are have been killing themselves for ages and I don't think I've hear them do 1 smart thing... they always do take the route that tries to screw over the customer and as such I see no reason to patron theaters.
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I avoid 3D showings like the plague. I feel they add nothing to a movie other then lightening my wallet. While I would accept that some films have actually used 3D well, the majority of the current trend is simply a gimmick. Paying extra $3-$5 for 3D is just stupid, IMHO.
While I've occasionally regretted not getting "the movie theater" experience for a film, I've never felt I missed out by not watching a movie in 3D.
3D-Only views = me waiting for the Blue Ray release.
re: piracy prevention? Easily defeated: Use one or the other lens of the glasses in front of the camera, and it's 2d. Tada.
My sister uses this, she can only see out of one eye, so she only sees one side of the 3d picture, but she still wears the glasses so she can see that side correctly.
Not that I advocate the piracy, of course, but I am just pointing it out: No stopping it.
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I'm now thinking about taking some of those glasses and putting two lefts or rights in them so I can see 2D when everyone else wants to see the 3d crapfest.
/Only James Cameron's Avatar has done 3D correctly.
//Tron Legacy sucked a little because it's 3D wasn't all that.
///Got it home, 2D, fantastic.
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According to the Boston Globe, some theaters in that area are not swapping out 3D lenses when showing 2D films, resulting in darker images. I've seen quite a few people complaining about dim pictures in theaters lately (I recall quite a few in the Thor thread), and I'm wondering if this might be a likely culprit. What do you all think?
I don't think I've ever been in a theater with images too dark to see (even the one 3D movie I have seen), but I would definitely complain if I couldn't see things on the screen: movies are expensive to go to.
Guide: Tanking, Wall of Fire Style (Updated for I19!), and the Four Rules of Tanking
Story Arc: Belated Justice, #88003
Synopsis: Explore the fine line between justice and vengeance as you help a hero of Talos Island bring his friend's murderer to justice.
Grey Pilgrim: Fire/Fire Tanker (50), Victory