By Sheigh Crabtree Mon Apr 24, 6:49 AM
ET
LAS VEGAS (Hollywood Reporter) - "Titanic" director James Cameron, warning
that Hollywood is "in a fight for survival," wants the movie industry to offer
films in digital 3-D to counteract declining sales and rampant piracy.
"Maybe we just need to fight back harder, come out blazing, not wither away
and die," Cameron said during his keynote address Sunday at the National
Association of Broadcasters' Digital Cinema Summit.
"D-cinema can do it, for a number of reasons, but because d-cinema is an
enabling technology for 3-D. Digital 3-D is a revolutionary form of
showmanship that is within our grasp. It can get people off their butts and
away from their portable devices and get people back in the theaters where
they belong."
Cameron also took the occasion of the world's largest annual film and
broadcast technology trade show at the Las Vegas Convention Center to fire a
few shots across the bow of the controversial practice of simultaneous movie
and video releasing being promoted by entrepreneur Mark Cuban and "Bubble"
director Steven Soderbergh, among others.
"We're so scared of piracy right now that we're ready to pimp out our
mothers," Cameron said. "This whole day-and-date DVD release nonsense? Here's
an answer: (Digital cinema is) one of the strongest reasons I've been pushing
3-D for the past few years because it offers a powerful experience which you
can only have in the movie theater."
The director of the highest-grossing film of all time in nominal terms at
$1.8 billion worldwide said he is considering a rerelease of 1997's "Titanic"
in digital 3-D just as Peter Jackson is planning at some point for "King Kong"
and, possibly, his "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy. George Lucas also plans to
rerelease his original "Star Wars" in 3-D timed to the space opera's 30th
anniversary next year.
With filmmakers and exhibitors united behind the idea of enhanced cinema
experiences, Cameron predicted that studios would become even more focused on
both releasing new titles and rereleasing classics in 3-D digital cinema.
"We will reach a point in a few years when every major studio will ask how
many of its four or five annual tentpoles should be in 3-D," Cameron said. "It
will become almost a rule that all major 3-D animated releases will be made
available in 3-D.
"Every year there will be a copy of timeless favorites brought back through
(3-D) dimensionalization," he said. "The new wave of 3-D films will be the
must-see films, the major releases from major filmmakers."
Cameron said that despite industrywide squabbling and fear-based
decision-making associated with new technology, and even despite the fact that
the major studios haven't cooperated in the past, the digital cinema rollout
actually is happening.
"We're halfway through the looking glass," he said. "We're past the point
where the fear of change is outweighed by the fear of not changing."
While most people associate 3-D with either animation or projection,
Cameron said that there are a variety of stereographic processes that can be
introduced while shooting, during postproduction, or after a movie has been
archived.
Among the films testing the various 3-D waters are "Narnia" producer Walden
Media and New Line Cinema's "Journey to the Center of the Earth," which is
being shot live-action with stereographic cameras; Robert Zemeckis' "Beowulf,"
which is employing 3-D-animated performance capture; and Walt Disney Feature
Animation's computer-animated "Meet the Robinsons," which will be projected in
3-D.
The filmmaker said his interest in digital 3-D goes back to his love of
movies and his love of making them for the big screen. "I'm not going to make
movies for people to watch on their cell phones. To me, I'd rather go back to
doing some more deep-ocean expeditions," Cameron said, referring to the
handful of maritime documentaries he has made since "Titanic." "I don't want
that grand, visionary, transporting movie experience made for the big screen
to become a thing of the past."
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter