Quote:
Originally Posted by Shasta Beast
You find them dim because they were never meant to be 3d. When the 3d effects are added post filming it darkens the whole negative.
The exception to this is when the movie is specifically shot in 3d like Avatar, but very few 3d movies do this.
The 3D fad sucked ass. If you can't do it right, don't do it at all, good riddance.
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I don't think so. They're dim because they the light that's going to each eye is cut in half by the polarizer. Bit of an odd complaint though, since there isn't a whole lot of ambient light in a typical theater.
To me, it's conversions and gimmicky use of 3D that have dampened people's enthusiam. On the other hand, if you made a great movie, released in 2D, then revealed that it was shot natively in 3D and released the 3D version, I think people would love it (e.g. the talk of Inception/Titanic/Star Wars being converted - I think if Star Wars was natively 3D it would be amazing).