I'm pretty sure this was just released by another company. The reviews were not good, so if there are usable elements apparently they didn't use them.
There's discussion about it somewhere in one of these threads.
Edit: here's the link to a member's review...
Over the years, I thought the story was that Warner refuses to allow any outside specialists to work on their properties? Either they do it in-house, or no one does it.
If all the scene set-ups are there and the print is in pretty good condition, maybe it could be converted? Or would that be cost-prohibitive for the current market?
Glad to hear it, but will the 3D errors that have been reported in the other thread be fixed first? Or are those unfixable?
EDIT: I see this was answered by Classicflix in the other thread:
Glad it's not just me. I find this often with these restored older films. Not enough of an issue to stop watching, but I'm forever closing one eye to try and figure out what's going on in one frame that's not in the other.
Not sure the subject/genre interests me with this title, but if it's from the 3D FA, it's worth at least one spin. Will pick this up at some point.
I should probably just create a Kickstarter account if these are going to be a regular thing. But every time these are announced, they seem to hit...
I just placed an order at VS for Silent Madness 3D, and a couple of other titles to reach free shipping.
I'd pre-order Wings of the Hawk but for some reason Kino does not allow PayPal for pre-orders. Will have to wait until release day for that one, I guess.
Can't say that any of the 3D titles above really grab my interest, but I'll purchase them to support the format. Who knows, perhaps I'll find a blind buy gem. :3dglasses:
I got a shipping notice several days ago, but haven't received it yet. Actually, haven't got any mail at all for three days, but I think it's just a fluke as neighbors have been getting some.
That sort of happened recently with 3D at home, too. By the time the technology improved and the bugs were mostly worked out, the majority had already moved on.
The masses are impatient, and have short attention spans. If it's not perfect right out of the gate, it's likely to fail.
It varies from theater to theater. At the two local theaters, for the first weekend of Frozen II, one had 7 of 11 shows in 3D, the other had only 1 of 9 in 3D.
Fingers crossed, but it seems like some of the new projector announcements in this forum do not include 3D options. Though hopefully unlike TV manufacturers, the projector companies will retain one or two models with the feature, at least.
Perhaps on catalog releases, but they're actually the only studio still releasing current films on domestic 3D blu-ray (most recently with Godzilla: King of the Monsters, Lego Movie 2, and Detective Pikachu).