Mind Your Business: To Pay for 3-D or Not to Pay for 3-D

I didn't see Thor in 3-D because it was a conversion. The reviews I read said the conversion wasn't bad, but also wasn't great. If I'm going to pay extra for 3-D, I want it to be great and worth the extra cost. I want to see a lot of depth that doesn't give me a headache.
There's only one 3-D conversion I've ever seen that looked great, and that's Piranha 3D. This is a perfect popcorn-movie and the 3-D effects do exactly what they are supposed to…put blood, violence and T&A right in your face. What's surprising is how clear and deep the 3-D image is.
I spoke with Jeff Maynard, The Weinstein Co. executive in charge of production, the man who oversaw the conversion, about why his conversion worked where so many others have failed.
"We shot the entire movie with 3-D in mind," Maynard says. "I worked with the director from the beginning to design all the shots for a great looking conversion. There are two main reasons we didn't shoot in 3-D: budget and water. Shooting on the water is complicated and expensive enough without adding 3-D rigs to the equation."
Maynard continues, "We even shot footage and did numerous conversions before production began."
If you haven't seen this movie in 3-D, you should. You won't believe that it wasn't shot in native 3-D, it's that good.
Last year, I produced the stereoscopic unit on a short film, Nazi Robots. (www.vimeo.com/21681295) I brought in Doug Stanley, owner of Ridgeline 3D, and producer of Discovery's hit series Deadliest Catch, to oversee the live-action 3-D camera crew. The director, Jason Pichon, wanted this project to be shot in native 3-D and the DAVE School students provided all the stereoscopic animation and compositing. Working with Doug, a 13-year 3-D veteran, taught me a lot about how to make the best use of 3-D technology.
Shooting a 3-D movie or TV show takes a lot more than just pointing a 3-D camera and pushing the record button. I asked Doug about the top four things all 3-D productions should do to make their project as incredible as possible.
Doug Stanley's Top Four 3-D Production Tips:
1. Stereoscopic production starts in prep: The project should be thought of and designed for 3-D, not as a 2-D production.
2. 3-D camera lenses need to be perfectly matched: The image will never be clear if the lenses vary even a little from each other.
3. Properly align the cameras: The extra time it takes on set to align the cameras, yaw, rotation, tilt, etc, the faster, cheaper and better your post will be.
4. You can't always fix it in post: Unlike 2-D shots, not all 3-D shots can be fixed in post.
"Every dollar spent in prep is a dollar well-spent," Stanley emphasizes.
One tip for those of you with 3-D TVs: set your TV to the brightest setting for viewing in 3-D. The best setting on my TV is the Sports setting. The difference is amazing.
Give 3-D a chance. A lot of people hate wearing the glasses, but you forget about them after a few minutes. The good glasses improve the quality of the image.
Now I have to make another excuse to spend hours watching 3-D movies all day long.
Mark Simon is the co-founder of SellYourTvConceptNow.com. Download his FREE REPORT on the 7 biggest show-pitch mistakes at www.SellYourTvConceptNow.com. He is a 2nd degree black belt in Tae Kwon Do and is the current (and three-time) Tae Kwon Do National Champion.























Hey, that post leaves me feeling fooilsh. Kudos to you!
Mark, did the guys who did Thor also do the 3-D conversion on Piranha?
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There's an even better link to see the Nazi Robots movie. The image is bigger and it has before and after images of the effects.
Check it out at the DAVE School website. Go to DAVEschool-dot-com. Click on Student Movies and then on Nazi Robots.
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