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[ Has anyone seen a movie that uses the "Real 3D" process? ]

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Old 07-02-2008, 09:34 PM   #1 of 53
EricSchulz
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Has anyone seen a movie that uses the "Real 3D" process?


One of the screens on our new theater is being converted to "Real 3D" (unfortunately, not before "Journey...Earth" starts next week!). I tried doing a forum search and came up empty. (Mods: if a thread exists, please link or merge this with it.)

How does this process work? Is it still a glasses/headset set-up? What's the quality like? Any pros or cons any of you care to share?

I LOVED the last 3-D resurgence (I remember seeing "Jaws 3-D", "Friday the 13th 3-D", "Comin' At Ya" and a revival of "House of Wax") and hope this becomes a viable movie viewing experience rather than a passing fad.



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Old 07-03-2008, 04:57 AM   #2 of 53
Douglas Monce
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Re: Has anyone seen a movie that uses the "Real 3D" process?


Quote:
Originally Posted by EricSchulz
One of the screens on our new theater is being converted to "Real 3D" (unfortunately, not before "Journey...Earth" starts next week!). I tried doing a forum search and came up empty. (Mods: if a thread exists, please link or merge this with it.)

How does this process work? Is it still a glasses/headset set-up? What's the quality like? Any pros or cons any of you care to share?

I LOVED the last 3-D resurgence (I remember seeing "Jaws 3-D", "Friday the 13th 3-D", "Comin' At Ya" and a revival of "House of Wax") and hope this becomes a viable movie viewing experience rather than a passing fad.


I would also like to see a really good 3D system make a come back. When I was a kid in the 70s a local theater showed a double feature of Creature from the Black Lagoon and It Came from Outer Space in 3D! I was VERY impressed. I wish some local theater would do a marathon of old 3D films.

Doug



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Old 07-03-2008, 07:27 AM   #3 of 53
Radioman970
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Re: Has anyone seen a movie that uses the "Real 3D" process?


I'm hoping the theatre in my tiny town gets Journey in 3D. I doubt they will. I'm wondering if it's worth seeing in 2D...

The last 3D movie I watched was Spykids 3D at home on DVD and I thought it was kind of cool but didn't match what I remember from seeing stuff like Space Hunter and Warhal's Frankenstein in the early 80s in the movie theatre.



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Last edited by Radioman970 : 07-03-2008 at 07:31 AM.
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Old 07-03-2008, 04:42 PM   #4 of 53
Gary Seven
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Re: Has anyone seen a movie that uses the "Real 3D" process?


I too am curious of this process. The 3D movie I saw was Flesh for Frankenstein in a midnight movie and it was wild.
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Old 07-03-2008, 07:34 PM   #5 of 53
Radioman970
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Re: Has anyone seen a movie that uses the "Real 3D" process?


Quote:
Originally Posted by Gary Seven
I too am curious of this process. The 3D movie I saw was Flesh for Frankenstein in a midnight movie and it was wild.
That's the one I saw too. Sometimes it's called Andy Warhol's Frankenstein. I saw it in the 80s. Funny, I was about 15 or so and me and a friend who was about 13 went to see it. Ha! Mom dropped us off but the ticket lady wouldn't sell us tickets. Mom was urked. "What the hell...? Why won't they sell you tickets?!" She didn't wait for an answer and bought our tickets for us and sped off. I mean, it was just Frankenstein, right? Even funnier, right in the middle of it my friend was saying "I don't think I'm supposed to be watching this..." (I believe during the imfamous rape scene) and I told him to just put his hands over his eyes. Damn, that's a good memory!!! One of my favorite personal movie moments. Poor mom...she thought it was Karloff in 3D!!!

I have both Fresh for Frankenstein and Blood for Dracula on DVD now and they are absolute blast! I really wish there were 3D version available on DVD though. There's just something missing watching 3D in 2D.. That's what I'm afraid of with Journey.



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Old 07-03-2008, 10:14 PM   #6 of 53
Thane101
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Re: Has anyone seen a movie that uses the "Real 3D" process?


I think you are refering to Real D technology. As far as I know its never been called Real 3d.

I work as a projectionist at a theater that has a 3d screen, and I have seen all of the 3D films since The Nightmare Before Christmas. I don't know how to compare it to older 3D films (since I haven't seen any), but the digital technology is supposed to make the images much more sharp, and the polarized glasses fit comfortably and cause minimal strain on your eyes.
The effect works quite well, almost like your watching a stage production.
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Old 07-03-2008, 10:56 PM   #7 of 53
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Re: Has anyone seen a movie that uses the "Real 3D" process?


Quote:
Originally Posted by Thane101
I think you are refering to Real D technology. As far as I know its never been called Real 3d.

I work as a projectionist at a theater that has a 3d screen, and I have seen all of the 3D films since The Nightmare Before Christmas. I don't know how to compare it to older 3D films (since I haven't seen any), but the digital technology is supposed to make the images much more sharp, and the polarized glasses fit comfortably and cause minimal strain on your eyes.
The effect works quite well, almost like your watching a stage production.


Ooops, I guess you are correct! Thanks for the info...



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Old 07-05-2008, 02:25 PM   #8 of 53
Leo Kerr
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Re: Has anyone seen a movie that uses the "Real 3D" process?


REAL-D uses circular polarization to make their system work. The single projector is alternating left-eye/right-eye with an LCD shutter in front of the lens that applies the polarization. The glasses are also circularly polarized.

The big difference between this and "old style" polarized 3-d is that if you tilt your head, you don't get the double-image thing going.

Leo
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Old 07-05-2008, 03:52 PM   #9 of 53
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Re: Has anyone seen a movie that uses the "Real 3D" process?


The other big difference is the single digital projector. Previous film based systems had to have two projectors running simultaneously, so film lengths were typically restricted until the platter system came along. House of Wax actually had an intermission so the projectionist could change reels.

Alternate film based systems have been proposed with a beam splitter and a single length of film, but Real D has been the first time a 3-D system has been implemented that requires minimal adjustments to the theatre.



\"My opinion is that (a) anyone who actually works in a video store and does not understand letterboxing has given up on life, and (b) any customer who prefers to have the sides of a movie hacked off should not be licensed to operate a video player.\"-- Roger Ebert
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Old 07-06-2008, 07:31 PM   #10 of 53
EricSchulz
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Re: Has anyone seen a movie that uses the "Real 3D" process?


Well, apparently switching over a screen to use this process isn't a huge deal...the local paper today states that "Journey..." will be showing next week in "Real D".

Thanks for the info guys...now, does anyone know whether older 3-D films can be "converted" to utilize this process? ("House of Wax", for example)



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Old 07-06-2008, 09:10 PM   #11 of 53