I am going to carry my Avatar glasses to future 3-D showings.  They are simple, 
they look good and they fit over my glasses.

~rave! 

--- In [email protected], "Mr. Worf" <hellomahog...@...> wrote:
>
> One of the things that has been bugging me is that there isn't a set
> standard yet for the glasses. Every company out there has their own glasses.
> Right now there are at least 30 different companies with their own version
> of the glasses.
> 
> On Mon, Mar 29, 2010 at 6:02 AM, Keith Johnson <keithbjohn...@...>wrote:
> 
> >
> >
> > Thanks, that's been my concern about the recent resurgence in 3D. I'm not
> > at all quite sure when I can trust that the movie will really be good and
> > *necessary* in 3D. It's easy to throw out gimmicks with the effect, but if
> > they're not well done, they're just bad distractions. Cameron did it
> > masterfully, really integrating the effect into the movie so that it was a
> > constant presence, but like real life, not something you kept dwelling on
> > all the time.
> > I haven't done much research into 3D, but I'd like to understand the
> > process of how it's done. I get the overall principle, but do the directors
> > really shoot the whole thing with an eye to 3D, or just slap some extra
> > cameras in as an almost afterthought? Again, Cameron truly thought about the
> > 3D, integrated into the movie, made decisions based on making sure it
> > enhanced, not distracted. But I think some directors aren't taking that time
> > and care.
> >
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "Kelwyn" <ravena...@...>
> > To: [email protected]
> > Sent: Monday, March 29, 2010 8:22:03 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
> > Subject: [scifinoir2] Re: 'Dragon' makes weekend debut at No. 1
> >
> >
> >
> > I saw "Alice" and I was powerfully underwhelmed. Unlike my "Avatar"
> > experience, the glasses was large and clunky and whole thing felt like
> > watching a movie through one of those old View-masters. The colors and "3-D"
> > were also reminiscent of View-master viewing.
> >
> > Oddly, I was more enchanted by the flashbacks featuring Alice first
> > Wonderland visit as a young girl.
> >
> > I will say Helena Bonham Carter is a big-headed hoot as the Red Queen and
> > Crispin Glover is appropriately dastardly as her wicked knave.
> >
> > ~(no)rave!
> >
> > --- In [email protected] <scifinoir2%40yahoogroups.com>, Keith
> > Johnson <KeithBJohnson@> wrote:
> > >
> > > Wow, at 2nd place "Alice" is still about to hit the three hundred mill
> > mark! Anyone whose seen it: is it worth it?
> > > I'll probably try to catch "Dragon" next weekend. Like I said earlier,
> > i'm not a big Dreamworks fan, but something about the trailers for this film
> > has me interested. Although, I'm not sure how the five-dollar theatre near
> > me can accommodate both "Dragon" and next week's "Clash of the Titans", as
> > it only has one 3D screen.
> > >
> > > Anyone see "Hot Tub Time Machine"? It could be stupid, camp fun, but I'd
> > like to know that before dropping my dwindling dollars on it...
> > >
> > > *******************************************
> > >
> > >
> > > 'Dragon' makes weekend debut at No. 1
> > > 'Alice' slips to second place with $17.3 million
> > >
> > >
> > > By Gregg Kilday
> > >
> > > March 28, 2010, 11:41 AM ET
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > hr/photos/stylus/132475-dragon_341x182.jpg
> > >
> > > "How to Train Your Dragon" 3D's rising star got another boost at the
> > North American boxoffice this weekend as Paramount's release of DreamWorks
> > Animation's "How to Train Your Dragon" flew to the top spot, and Disney's
> > "Alice in Wonderland" held on to enough screens to emerge a solid number
> > two.
> > >
> > > Co-existing on the available 3D screens, "Dragon" bowed to an estimated
> > $43.3 million, while "Alice," in its fourth weekend, lost 49% of its
> > audience as it took in another $17.3 million, bringing its domestic total to
> > a whopping $293 million.
> > >
> > > MGM's "Hot Tub Time Machine," which relied on R-rated comedy instead of
> > flashy effects, debuted more modestly as it collected $13.7 million.
> > >
> > > Close behind was the second weekend of Sony's battling rom-com "The
> > Bounty Hunter." The Jennifer Aniston-Gerard Butler teaming fell by just 40%
> > as it brought in $12.4 million, bringing its domestic total to $38.8
> > million.
> > >
> > > In fifth place, Fox's "Diary of a Wimpy Kid," also in its second weekend,
> > declining by 55%, brought home $10 million as its cume rose to $35.8
> > million.
> > >
> > > While the weekend's top ten amassed $111.9 million, about on par with the
> > $110.7 million that the top ten collected last weekend, this frame's top ten
> > gross was down 18% from the top ten in the comparable weekend last year when
> > DreamWorks Animation's "Monsters vs. Aliens" debuted to $59.3 million.
> > >
> > > The "Dragon" launch did provide further evidence of the appeal of 3D. The
> > movie bowed in 4,055 locations, but ticket sales from its 2,178 3D theaters,
> > a number that raised prices this weekend, accounted for 68% of the movie's
> > weekend gross. Imax alone -- "Dragon" is playing in 185 Imax theaters --
> > contributed 11.5% of the total, up from the 10.5% of gross that Imax
> > theaters contributed to "Alice's" opening weekend. "That shows we're
> > accumulating more fans, as we go along, who chose Imax as a venue," said
> > Greg Foster, president of filmed entertainment at Imax, which will be
> > hosting "Dragon" for six weeks until "Iron Man 2" comes along.
> > >
> > > "Dragon" didn't explode out of the gate like "Monsters" last March. But
> > with a Cinemascore of A, and 97% positive reviews on the RottenTomatoes Web
> > site, it should play well over the spring holidays.
> > >
> > > "It's a different competitive environment," said Anne Globe, DreamWorks
> > head of worldwide marketing. "The demos were very evenly split, so the movie
> > is playing broadly. The reviews have been tremendous. And we're anticipating
> > very strong playability over the next few weeks. Exhibition is really
> > committed to 'Dragon' and to DreamWorks Animation."
> > >
> > > The movie's opening weekend audience bridged the age gap: 49% of
> > moviegoers were under 25, and 51% older. And it skewed slightly more female
> > by 55%.
> > >
> > > "Hot Tub," meanwhile, played more to older (62% were over 25) males
> > (58%). Its $13.7 million opening from 2,754 locations was on the lower end
> > of expectations for the time-travel comedy, produced for about $35 million
> > and starring John Cusack and Rob Corddry.
> > >
> > > While Cinemascore's polling awarded it a B, MGM reported the movie
> > received a definitive recommend of 85% from young males, so the embattled
> > studio, which hasn't had a movie in the marketplace since last fall's
> > "Fame," is hoping they spread the world.
> > >
> > > Filling out the top ten, Paramount's teen comedy "She's Out of My League"
> > ranked sixth with $3.5 million; Universal's Iraq-set "Green Zone" was
> > seventh as it eked out $3.4 million; Paramount's "Shutter Island," with a
> > cumulative domestic haul of $121 million, was eighth with $3.2 million;
> > Universal's futuristic thriller "Repo Man" was ninth with $3 million; and
> > Fox Searchlight's ethnic comedy "Our Family Wedding" was tenth with $2.2
> > million.
> > >
> > > For the first time in its 15-week run, Fox's "Avatar" fell out of the top
> > ten. Ranked eleventh, it rang up $2 million as its North American total
> > amounted to more than $740 million.
> > >
> > > On the specialty front, Focus' "Greenberg," Noah Baumbach's L.A.-set
> > relationship study starring Ben Stiller, expanded into 181 theaters, where
> > it grossed $1.1 million for a per-theater average of $5,850, bringing its
> > cume to $1.2 million.
> > >
> > > Sony Picture Classics first weekend of Atom Egoyan's R-rated marital
> > thriller "Chloe," starring Liam Neeson with Amanda Seyfried in the title
> > role, collected $1 million on 350 screens for a per-theater average of
> > $2,863.
> > >
> > > Apparition's "The Runaways," in its second weekend, had to settle for
> > $446,000 in 237 theaters and a cume of $1.6 million.
> > >
> > > Music Box's Scandanavian detective tale "The Girl with the Dragon
> > Tattoo," also in its second weekend, showed more life as it took in $352,000
> > in 44 theaters for a cume of $840,000.
> > >
> > > "Waking Sleeping Beauty," Disney's documentary about the studio's
> > animation renaissance in the '80s, scored $33,100 in its opening engagements
> > in five locations.
> > >
> >
> >
> >
> > 
> >
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Celebrating 10 years of bringing diversity to perversity!
> Mahogany at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/
>


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