I am probably repeating myself here, but I am so over 3D, and I wish Hollywood would have developed the same sentiment by now, but from what I can see we are not in the closing act of this period yet. For me, curiosity for the novel technology, with admiration for when it is well executed and makes sense (Avatar), has first given way to indifference (Alice in Wonderland), and now finally reached the point where it actually deters me from seeing a movie. Aggravating factors to the silliness: 3D movies are more expensive (so that we still had to pay, on top of our free ticket coupons, an amount that would be the full price of admission elsewhere), and Tron Legacy was only partly in 3D (the scenes that take place outside of the Grid are 2D), but the Chinese subtitles where in 3D all the time, so that you had to pick between headache from the glasses and headache from blurry kanji.
Jeff Bridges is back (The Dude meets Obi-Wan Kenobi) to reprise his role from the 1982 classic, as is Bruce Boxleitner, who at the time when I first saw it on TV was the bigger draw for me, thanks to Scarecrow and Mrs. King (Agentin mit Herz).
6 points







Part eighteen: Dolby® 3D Digital Cinema is the right choice for 3D presentations, combining an extraordinary 3D experience with cost-effective compatibility and flexibility.