I have to wonder about their reasoning for turning it down. Perhaps authoring a 3D Blu-ray was beyond their expertise? Or maybe they don't think 3D sales are strong enough.
I think authoring brightness adjustment into the disc would be a bad idea. The disc will be encoded as a 3D stream (MVC) all the way and I don't know if it's even possible to create a movie file that switches back and forth from MVC to AVC. It will be a glasses-on necessity for the entire movie...
Is the 3D Film Archive going to do an article on The Mask? I'd love to hear more about how the Blu-ray was produced. Even though it was one of the very few anaglyphic 3D releases, the 3D sequences were actually shot in dual-strip, correct? And is the Blu-ray sourced from dual-strip? Also Kino's...
Kino revealed the Blu-ray cover here. The cover boasts "Electro-magic Sound a new dimension in stereophonics". Does this mean the disc will be in stereo? How many channels?