A big blow to film production at Kodak and Fuji

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It is possible to convert old films to 3D. Kodak recently patented one such method. A photo of the Fuji display was posted here recently with the lament on how much the product line had shrunk.

PE
 
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Only way to sustain film production in the long run is supporting the chinese.

Start buing Lucky and aother stuff from China - direct from Hong Kong and send them a strong message that they can keep their lines running.

Kodak and Fuji will die off, no matter what.
 

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The projectors are Sony 4K projectors, seeing as most films are also mastered in 2K before being printed to film... the quality can be much better too, 3D or not.
 

nickrapak

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3D is the Quadraphonic of 2010.

Total f'ing joke of a technology.

Want more consumers coming to your films? Increase the quality of your content. Gimmicks only go so far - and trust me, 3D is a *gimmick* and a half - thoroughly unneeded for the majority of cinema content.

The problem is that most people are not interested in petty things like "plot", "good acting", and "quality cinematography." They just want blue people to jump out of the screen at them.
 

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I saw my first 3D movie a few weeks ago (took my 8yr old to see Cats & Dogs). This was at a state of the art new theatre. I didn't like it at all. There was an annoying sheen that permeated a lot of the imagery (hard to explain), there were also glare issues coming from the eye side of my glasses. Also, the effect at it's greatest wasn't anything that wowed me, it just didn't add anything worthwhile to the movie. The 3D tv sets seem the same, however it looks like the latest tech does not require glasses so it will be interesting to see how that looks.
 

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I hate 3D with the burning passion of a thousand suns, so when my wife and I watched Despicable Me, we watched it in 2D. Even though it was 2D, I kept having strange gut feelings about the direction until I realized that those strange moments were obviously intended as 3D gimmicks. Very annoying. I anticipate that 3D will die again, leaving a batch of movies with bizarre cinematography in its wake.
 
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I hate 3D with the burning passion of a thousand suns, so when my wife and I watched Despicable Me, we watched it in 2D. Even though it was 2D, I kept having strange gut feelings about the direction until I realized that those strange moments were obviously intended as 3D gimmicks. Very annoying. I anticipate that 3D will die again, leaving a batch of movies with bizarre cinematography in its wake.

What an amazingly prescient observation that was seven months ago...

"There has been an alarming dip in 3D grosses at the domestic box office this summer. The trouble started with Disney's "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides." For the first time, a majority of the audience opted to see a studio 3D picture in 2D. It happened again a week later with DreamWorks Animation's 'Kung Fu Panda 2.'"

[...]

"It's [3D technology] not nearly as big a win as it should be, and it's certainly not the win it was headed toward being, and that's really heartbreaking to me because we have managed to snatch defeat out of the jaws of victory as only Hollywood can do."


Jeffrey Katzenberg weighs in on 3D's "heartbreaking" decline
By Pamela McClintock – Fri Jun 10, 8:29 pm ET​

Ken
 

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I reported recently that one of the production machines at EK has shut down. This machine was used primarily in the production of Motion Picture products. So, whatever is said, the effect lingers in production.

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I reported recently that one of the production machines at EK has shut down. This machine was used primarily in the production of Motion Picture products. So, whatever is said, the effect lingers in production.

No disagreement with that.

I was just commenting on BetterSense's prodigious powers of prognostication. And I loved his phrase, "I hate 3D with the burning passion of a thousand suns," remembering it when I read the article last night on the recent market demise of 3D motion pictures. Several others had also expressed a similar sentiment - albeit not quite so poetically.

That's all...

Ken
 
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And my point was that even with the rapid decline in 3D, the traditional MP market has not rebounded significantly. The economy has a lot to do with it though.

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Again, no disagreements. I was just amazed by the 'Bambino' moment of accurately calling that particular shot seven months in advance...

Ken
 
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Ken;

No argument. Kodak is being wounded by a thousand cuts. This is just one more, but quite serious blow. Even if 3D vanished today, the inroads of digital MP conversion have taken place. The 3D fad came and went in the 50s with a whole slew of methods and pictures. And the gimmicks were the same then to wow the audience. And, it is due to fade again and come back again, but with 3D TV here, there may be a change that is hidden below the surface. I see quite a few people buying those, and there are more and more 3D DVDs out there.

PE
 
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