• And a 3-D version of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s American classic The Great Gatsby is due in theaters at Christmas, a sign that 3-D might be evolving into a vehicle for serious films not dependent on action sequences.
“Today, we’re starting to see 3-D being used more as a way to explore filmmaking with serious directors in a variety of films,” said Patrick Corcoran, director of media and research for the National Association of Theatre Owners, the largest trade association representing movie theaters.
Having opened on Wednesday, April 4 to give it a long 5 day opening even the great Titanic only scored $25.7m. For a film that is such a monster hit in it's initial run this tells me people aren't just going to rush out to 3-D film re-releases.
Plus Star Wars Ep.1 did very poor in February.
For the home video market studios have been trying to shove 3-D down the throats of consumers, only a year or two after getting people to buy into HD... So let's see the logic... back in 2009 I paid $1500 for my brand spanking new 55" HDTV... now you want me to fork out $2800 for a 3-D version of the same TV?!?!?!?! No thanks.
Having opened on Wednesday, April 4 to give it a long 5 day opening even the great Titanic only scored $25.7m. For a film that is such a monster hit in it's initial run this tells me people aren't just going to rush out to 3-D film re-releases.
For the home video market studios have been trying to shove 3-D down the throats of consumers, only a year or two after getting people to buy into HD... So let's see the logic... back in 2009 I paid $1500 for my brand spanking new 55" HDTV... now you want me to fork out $2800 for a 3-D version of the same TV?!?!?!?! No thanks.
That's why I waited to get a 3D HD TV rather than get a HD or BluRay player sooner. But its only a bedroom 32" set that wasn't that much more than a HD set of the same size.
I got it as much for knowing that as a fad it might die out, so at least I'm covered, and can enjoy them a bit longer.
Right now there's very few films I'd ever want to watch at the cinema again that aren't 3D.
I've got this new idea for films, it's called a talkie
I've got this new idea for films. it's called colour.
I've got this new idea for FX in films, it's called CGI.
etc..
When ever something new comes around some people will think it's just a fad and not worth taking seriously.
^^^
It's icing to be sure. The conversion process is reported to cost around $10-15m so it paid for itself. However for a film of it's magnitude the stakes were higher. I believe BoxOffice.com had an industry predict of $120-140m for the 3-D re-release. If I find the link I'll edit it back in.
Edit: Their OW predict was $42m, it'll be lucky to mange $50m. It's predicted run was $155m and if you aren't famliar with BoxOffice.com they are a respected industry site. Those predicts weren't made at a whimsy but based on insider expectations along with other factors.
^Perhaps, but just because something was a fad previously it doesn't mean it'll be a fad this time around.
James Cameron’s $18M 3D conversion of his ocean epic met domestic expectations and, according to Paramount, made $17.3M this weekend and reached $25.7M for its first 5 days in release despite a marathon running time. IMAX had 9 of the top 10 locations for the film earning $2.0M in 79 theaters. Amid reports of sold-out shows, the first international numbers coming in from Fox steamed to $35.5M from 5,579 screens in 53 markets (84 countries). “That’s a per screen average of more than $6,300 per screen! It’s a fantastic start,” a Fox exec emails me. “We needed a $30M opening weekend to be on pace to $100M for international (not including China), and we exceeded that estimate by 18%.” Despite half the daily show times of the top competitors, Titanic 3D grabbed the #1 market share position in the UK, Germany, Italy, Austria and Sweden, while in a tight struggle for #1 in Russia with fellow opener American Reunion. Titanic 3D was the #1 MPA title in France, Japan, Hong Kong and Switzerland and #2 title overall in Holland, Belgium and Denmark. To illustrate how much the theatrical world has changed since the 1997/1998 release, the 2012 Russia opening weekend ($4.9M) is 97% of the lifetime theatrical result of what the original did in Russia in 1998 ($5.1M). China opens Tuesday, followed by the majority of Latin America (17 markets) including Mexico, Brazil and Argentina next weekend.
We'll just have to take their word for it about "meeting expectations" but it sounds like spin to me.
Given the subsidy of 3-D surcharges and the investment in 3-D infrastructure (i.e. new digital projects) by exhibitors, there's a good chance that 3-D won't go away. Indeed, in the face of declining revenues from 3-D movies in the US, it hasn't. But it's not a sure thing.
Given the subsidy of 3-D surcharges and the investment in 3-D infrastructure (i.e. new digital projects) by exhibitors, there's a good chance that 3-D won't go away. Indeed, in the face of declining revenues from 3-D movies in the US, it hasn't. But it's not a sure thing.
But in case of upgrading to digital projection systems it's not much of a loss. When 3-D fails... and it will. The exhibitors will simply switch over to straight 2-D digital projection which all of these systems are capable of anyway.
The real point of the 3-D movement by guys like Cameron and Lucas was to get theater owners to convert from traditional film projection to digital... the 3-D was just a mechanism to push theaters along. Digital adaptation was exceedingly slow from 2002-2007... the "3-D craze" simply gave the process a jolt.
Yancy
And what would Cameron and Lucas gain by that push?
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