Solo4114
Master Member
I dunno. There's more support from the consumer electronics side of the industry this time around, and I think these days that's what's critical for pushing 3D filming.
I mean, if ONLY the theaters have it, then it's just another expensive gimmick to try to foist on the public. Might be neat once or twice, but in general it'll get annoying, and it won't be profitable for the studios to process their films for 3D when they can't really make any more money off of it as a result. On the other hand, when you know you can get revenues from Blu-Ray sales, it makes a lot more sense financially to invest in the technology.
Panasonic's plasma line this year, and Sony's (and I think Samsung's) LCD line of TVs are all coming "3D ready" or "3D enabled" or whatever. Usually with one pair of glasses. (which means you have to buy any others if you want to have company over...) So, I'd expect to see more content pushed as 3D. ESPN has been hyping the hell out of 3D sports during the world cup, you've got films like Avatar and the Pixar movies coming out with native 3D, so I think that the public will respond better this time if only because tehre'll be a more marked industry-wide push to make it happen.
I mean, let's face it. They can't keep pushing "even higher hi-def" TVs on the public, so the consumer electronics business model demands that there be new technology to sell people. And given that everyone JUST upgraded over the last few years, what else are they gonna sell? 3D represents a perfect way to get people spending, and a perfect way to keep studio revenues high and theaters competitive.
I mean, if ONLY the theaters have it, then it's just another expensive gimmick to try to foist on the public. Might be neat once or twice, but in general it'll get annoying, and it won't be profitable for the studios to process their films for 3D when they can't really make any more money off of it as a result. On the other hand, when you know you can get revenues from Blu-Ray sales, it makes a lot more sense financially to invest in the technology.
Panasonic's plasma line this year, and Sony's (and I think Samsung's) LCD line of TVs are all coming "3D ready" or "3D enabled" or whatever. Usually with one pair of glasses. (which means you have to buy any others if you want to have company over...) So, I'd expect to see more content pushed as 3D. ESPN has been hyping the hell out of 3D sports during the world cup, you've got films like Avatar and the Pixar movies coming out with native 3D, so I think that the public will respond better this time if only because tehre'll be a more marked industry-wide push to make it happen.
I mean, let's face it. They can't keep pushing "even higher hi-def" TVs on the public, so the consumer electronics business model demands that there be new technology to sell people. And given that everyone JUST upgraded over the last few years, what else are they gonna sell? 3D represents a perfect way to get people spending, and a perfect way to keep studio revenues high and theaters competitive.