A
Anonymous
Guest
I was at Virgin last week and they have a £7k plus 3d TV with some Lucas film and Coraline content in 3D as well as other content.
The first thing I noticed was that backward formatted content (not filmed in 3d) is more "layered". items are layered on the screen and it looks odd.
When content is filmed in 3d (2 cameras side by side) the 3d effect is line "seeing" distance - it does work.
3d is the equivelant of stereo sound - when you see it, you'll wonder how we did without. but i dont think it will be a reality until content is 3d as standard.
The first thing I noticed was that backward formatted content (not filmed in 3d) is more "layered". items are layered on the screen and it looks odd.
When content is filmed in 3d (2 cameras side by side) the 3d effect is line "seeing" distance - it does work.
3d is the equivelant of stereo sound - when you see it, you'll wonder how we did without. but i dont think it will be a reality until content is 3d as standard.