That question has been asked everywhere else except here.
Most of us we have read few on this, and most of us we don't really care. I am not most of us, I do care, about 3D and the rest.
If you don't live near a big city where the best films are projected, you are restricted to inferior film's experience, and also from lesser films.
Home is where the heart/art is, short of living near a museum. It's a way of speech.
? https://3dcontentblog.wordpress.com/2017/08/01/james-camerons-assessment-of-the-3d-industry/
Money wise, yes 3D is dead, very dead. @ least here in North America.
Technologically advanced/artistically/futuristically speaking, 3D is just hibernating, till it resurrects itself from the masters of 3D moving cameras, the 3D avant-gardiste cinematographers and film directors, I firmly believe.
The future will determine that level of veracity.
The majority don't buy into 3D, and the TV makers and the movie theater's managers they all know it.
Even IMAX 3D is going to emphasize more 2D films from now on.
It is also important to remember that I'm talking about North America, and not about South America, or South Africa, or Europe or Japan or China or India.
Each world's regions have different numbers on 3D ticket sales and 3D theatre's and 3D moviegoers and 3D TV's accessibility and 3D projectors (& 3D players).
I'd say it's fair to say that here it's a special minority niche. ...Like hi-end audio.
I'm a big 3D Blu-ray fan myself, and the occasional 3D IMAX film. I also love OLED, UHD, HDR, Dolby Vision and everything else 2D visuals.
If someone was going to drop me on a remote island of the Pacific with my family and best friends and only one projection screen, including a collection of films and documentaries, with the choice of 3D or not; I certainly would include 3D in the lot. I'd rather be full equipped than restricted.
What do you think, dead or alive?
Most of us we have read few on this, and most of us we don't really care. I am not most of us, I do care, about 3D and the rest.
If you don't live near a big city where the best films are projected, you are restricted to inferior film's experience, and also from lesser films.
Home is where the heart/art is, short of living near a museum. It's a way of speech.
? https://3dcontentblog.wordpress.com/2017/08/01/james-camerons-assessment-of-the-3d-industry/
Money wise, yes 3D is dead, very dead. @ least here in North America.
Technologically advanced/artistically/futuristically speaking, 3D is just hibernating, till it resurrects itself from the masters of 3D moving cameras, the 3D avant-gardiste cinematographers and film directors, I firmly believe.
The future will determine that level of veracity.
The majority don't buy into 3D, and the TV makers and the movie theater's managers they all know it.
Even IMAX 3D is going to emphasize more 2D films from now on.
It is also important to remember that I'm talking about North America, and not about South America, or South Africa, or Europe or Japan or China or India.
Each world's regions have different numbers on 3D ticket sales and 3D theatre's and 3D moviegoers and 3D TV's accessibility and 3D projectors (& 3D players).
I'd say it's fair to say that here it's a special minority niche. ...Like hi-end audio.
I'm a big 3D Blu-ray fan myself, and the occasional 3D IMAX film. I also love OLED, UHD, HDR, Dolby Vision and everything else 2D visuals.
If someone was going to drop me on a remote island of the Pacific with my family and best friends and only one projection screen, including a collection of films and documentaries, with the choice of 3D or not; I certainly would include 3D in the lot. I'd rather be full equipped than restricted.
What do you think, dead or alive?