Titanic was a wonderful movie. Short of maybe Cameron re-doing the SFX in it with true 3D (nothing he can do about the live action stuff) I don't think I'm interested in this project.
The sinking of the ship is certainly 3D-friendly. Beyond that, there's been plenty of talk about its application in drama; Hitchcock did a movie in 3D the first time it was big.Why would a movie that's mainly character drama and romance like Titanic need to be done in 3-D?
It's not as though a 1912 ocean liner is all that much less alien to today's world than Pandora's big-ass rainforest...Why would a movie that's mainly character drama and romance like Titanic need to be done in 3-D?
Interesting, on teh commentary...
People complain that Jack and Rose wouldn't have survived the suction (despite the fact that it was only the last part of the ship that was under them), Cameron said there wasn't much suction at all and they exagerrated it instead of minizing it. He added that, historically, the chef near them merely "stepped off" the boat as it went down and didn't even get his hair wet.
Excuse me everybody.Titanic was a wonderful movie.
The sinking of the ship is certainly 3D-friendly. Beyond that, there's been plenty of talk about its application in drama; Hitchcock did a movie in 3D the first time it was big.Why would a movie that's mainly character drama and romance like Titanic need to be done in 3-D?
The sinking of the ship is certainly 3D-friendly.
It's not as though a 1912 ocean liner is all that much less alien to today's world than Pandora's big-ass rainforest...
Maybe I'm a filthy old man, but the first thing I thought of was seeing the drawing scene in 3D.
Interesting, on teh commentary...
People complain that Jack and Rose wouldn't have survived the suction (despite the fact that it was only the last part of the ship that was under them), Cameron said there wasn't much suction at all and they exagerrated it instead of minizing it. He added that, historically, the chef near them merely "stepped off" the boat as it went down and didn't even get his hair wet.
That's correct. Also, it was reported that he was "plastered" and only suffered a cold as a result.
I was a Titanic buff for a decade before the film came out, so the chance to see it dramatized was pretty darn cool (imagine reading Trek novels for ten years before ever getting to see it), and I was happy that Cameron did what I'd consider a reasonable job of staying true to events as they most likely transpired.
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