Back to the future in 3d
Ok so bob gale wont let anyway convert back to the future into 3d which is a shame because I think it would of been epic but im sure some people would be angry anywhere heres a link to prove it: http://blog.moviefone.com/2010/10/25/back-to-the-future-bob-gale-interview/
would you guys like a 3d conversion?
would you guys like a 3d conversion?
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I seriously never warmed up for 3D. It's pretty OK for some of the lesser inspired action movies I guess, but I just don't like what it does to cinematography. If something in 3D is in the foreground, people LOOK AT IT. No traditional picture composition technique gets in the way. And more and more directors work with that as their only trick up their sleeve, because it beats everything else hands down. Besides, I hate the glasses as they really don't fit over my own glasses well. I seriously hope it's just a fashion.
Now I really hope I haven't offended anyone.
Much more appreciated would be a high quality transfer to HD. As you can see on some screenshots in various forums, there were TV transmissions without excessive edge enhancement and noise reduction, which put the Blu-Ray to shame. There is no cheap filter which can enhance the movies. Only a higher quality transfer can do this.
I second that!
Why the HELL do we need to mess with films that should be LEFT ALONE!
I hate how movies are only in theaters for the first month or two. They do reruns on TV so why don't they do it with theaters. You can't really say you get a better experience with a movie at home than the theater.
Someone please correct me if I am wrong however.
How does that change anything? If it's not redone for 3D the 3D display screen will need to do a 3D conversion and 3D requires encoding. I don't see how PC games will make a difference.
Well I have seen the lion king in 3d I did notice any drop in quality
If an individual or a small studio were doing 3D conversion of an existing 2D film, then I can see how reencoding the video could cause a drop in quality, but I would think that a big film studio would be able to use higher resolution source images and they'd have powerful enough computer banks that the quality drop from reencoding wouldn't be obvious. The real issue is that with a film shot in 2D, there's only one image for each frame, so the second image in the stereo pair has to be approximated by a computer filling in information that wasn't in the original frame, which is bound to look like crap more often than not. I assume it's got to take a ton of hand tweaking to fill in that missing information... it boggles my mind that they're able to get them to look even as decent as they currently do.
To say nothing of the fact that they weren't shot with 3D in mind