3D movies without specs appeal

during the UEFA EURO 2012 group B match between Denmark and Germany at Arena Lviv on June 17, 2012 in L'viv, Ukraine.

during the UEFA EURO 2012 group B match between Denmark and Germany at Arena Lviv on June 17, 2012 in L'viv, Ukraine.

Published Oct 21, 2013

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In the two weeks since it launched, Gravity, the sci-fi spectacular starring Sandra Bullock and George Clooney, has made $191 million (almost R1.9 billion) at the box office.

But it’s not just the size of the receipts that has surprised movie experts – it’s the fact that 80 percent of the audience are prepared to pay a premium of between $3 and $5 to watch the film in 3D.

To put that in context, it is a higher proportion than for Avatar, the film that broke all box office records in 2009 and was supposed to herald the coming of 3D as a mass-market phenomenon.

Indeed, before Gravity’s eye-popping numbers were revealed, many critics had been talking about the death of 3D. For film critic Ryan Gilbey of the New Statesman, the technology has a fundamental problem it can never overcome – the need to wear glasses.

“3D puts a barrier between us and the screen. You need to be immersed in a film to truly enjoy it and all of a sudden you have equipment that prevents that,” he said.

But a rival technology has emerged that could change all that. The X, the first film to use Screen X technology, was unveiled last week at the Busan International Film Festival in South Korea.

Screen X presents viewers with a 270° field of vision that creates an immersive experience without the need to wear 3D glasses. It even solves the widescreen problem that has hindered the format since 3D first appeared in 1915.

The “golden era” for 3D took place between 1952 and 1954, reaching a peak with Alfred Hitchcock’s Dial M For Murder. Although the film was a success in 3D, the director admitted later that he believed 3D to be a “nine-day wonder – and I came in on the ninth day”. At the time exhibitors and audiences were uncomfortable with 3D, preferring instead to try out widescreen formats such as Cinemascope and Cinerama.

Widescreen has had a habit of killing off 3D. In the early Eighties there was another wave of 3D headed by Jaws 3D and Amityville 3D. Yet the production costs were high and audiences were not convinced by the plastic glasses that had one red lens and one green.

The format remained niche even with the introduction of Imax, as the cost of building new cinemas to support the technology has always been prohibitive.

The holy grail has been to design a format that is widescreen and immerses the viewer in the film without the need for glasses or new cinemas.

Enter Screen X. The South Korean company behind the technology, CJ CGV Screen X, began development work last January.

Screen X has been implemented at 23 theatres in Seoul on 47 screens, where audiences have had a taste of the technology through adverts running before films.

The firm says the system can be implemented into almost every existing theatre running today at a cost of between £90 000 (R1.4m) and £120 000 (R1.9m), depending on size.

In an effort to showcase the technology, Screen X commissioned director Kim Jee-woon to direct a half-hour film, The X. The budget of just $900 000 included some research and development costs.

The film was shown to the public at the Busan festival. The plot is transparently an excuse to show off the technology. A secret agent called X is sent on a mission to deliver a package to R, only to discover that his girlfriend Mia has been taken hostage.

I found the viewing experience overwhelming. It began with the action on the front screen and then suddenly I was immersed in images from front and side, with motorcycles crashing beside me.

Screen X works best when the images contain a lot of CGI, but as a prototype, the potential for the technology to displace 3D is immediately clear.

The success of the public screenings of The X means Screen X will be further improved upon. A plan for a feature-length film is in the works.

“Admittedly right now the technology isn’t fully there,” said director Kim. “However, by the time a film rolls out, which might be 2015, or ambitiously speaking the end of 2014, the technology will be ready. We now know what the limitations are and exactly where we need to step up our game. Then we will open up challenges to Hollywood.”

One of its attractions to cinema chains around the world is that it’s easy to set up. “It only takes three days to set up,” Kim said. “It’s a relatively low cost compared to retro-fitting a theatre and other types of formats.”

The chances are the technology will arrive in Europe in 2016. Kim said: “We want to make the technology as good as possible before pushing it out to the world.” – The Independent

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