Monday, March 21, 2005
Member since:
August 2003
August 2003
LAS VEGAS (Hollywood Reporter) - George Lucas is such a fan of the
***latest 3-D technology*** that he is planning to remaster all of the "Star
Wars" films for rerelease in 3-D.
...hoped to have the first film ready for the 30th anniversary of the original "Star Wars" movie in 2007 and that he would then rerelease one "Star Wars" film per year in 3-D.
Rad the whole article here:
- EXTERNAL LINK -
***latest 3-D technology*** that he is planning to remaster all of the "Star
Wars" films for rerelease in 3-D.
...hoped to have the first film ready for the 30th anniversary of the original "Star Wars" movie in 2007 and that he would then rerelease one "Star Wars" film per year in 3-D.
Rad the whole article here:
- EXTERNAL LINK -
Monday, March 21, 2005
Member since:
February 2005
February 2005
Just when you thought he couldn't possibly milk this cow any more. Frankly I think all six of them are ready for utter transplants, even if the sixth hasn't even come out yet.
Monday, March 21, 2005
Member since:
August 2004
August 2004
You think that they will be coming out with home versions of these 3-D projectors? And if so, how will that affect HD-DVD and Blu-Ray (assuming that neither dies out by the time that 3-D hits the homes). Will 3-D technology benefit from HD-DVD and Blu-Ray technology?
Monday, March 21, 2005
Member since:
November 2003
November 2003
Surely '3D' presentations will benefit from higher capacity storage, because that allows for more data/disc. A 3D presentation does not exempt it from the limitations of regular video; ie, for the same format/codec, higher capacity allows for higher quality content, until a limitation is reached for the format/codec. And there's also the 'law' of diminishing returns.