Friday, August 26, 2011

Brief History Of 3D Cinema


Wondering how to fashion began at the movies in 3D? Well, put your frame anaglyph 3D plastic cups and take a walk down memory lane!

First, a little science: 3D anaglyph images were created using two layers of color slightly when placed on top of each other. Normally, the main subject of the image is centered, while the foreground and background are offset from each other to create what is called a "3D stereo" image. The visual cortex of the brain that brings the two images together, when you look through a special reader has two lenses with different colored filters, usually red and blue.

British film pioneer William Friese-Greene gets the glory to launch an era of stereoscopic films at the end of 1980. Friese-Greene patented 3-D to move the process in which two films were shown side by side on the screen. Movie watchers seemed stereoscope images that brought the two together (remembering the sight of stereoscopes timey old movies?). Because this process was so cumbersome mechanical - thinking of trying to get two different movies on the screen to sync - it will never be commercially viable for use in theater.

The first round of commercial 3D movies, movie, or intended to pay the public, was "The Power of Love" debuted in theaters Ambassador Los Angeles' Hotel September 27, 1922. This was also the first recorded use of the history of a red-green anaglyph glasses to watch a movie. Unfortunately, the film did not get taken for a wide range of publication, and is now lost.

December 1922 was a great moment for the creators of the film in 3D. William Van Doren Kelley, who created the Prizma color system, has developed a 3D camera system of its own and started shooting and showing a series of films he called "PLASTICON. The first was titled" The cinema of the future "New York is shown in Rivoli Theatre. At the same time, Laurens Hammond, who invented the Hammond organ, electronics, and his partner William F. Cassidy presents its 3D Teleview system. Teleview use the older form of movie called" alternative -frame sequencing. "This process alternating right and left images in quick succession, where the public has seen through the spectators to their seats synchronized together.

While there were various attempts anaglyph 3D movies over the next 30 years - in particular the introduction by Edwin H. Land's Polaroid film - the climax format arrived between 1952 and 1955. It is when the filmmakers tried to make films "bigger and better than ever" by experimenting widely anaglyph 3D process. This period is often called "the golden era of 3D."

The first color stereoscopic feature "Bwana Devil" was released in 1952. Produced, written and directed by Arc penny, "Bwana Devil", the project was dual-band filters with Polaroid. The iconic movie fans now see a 3D movie with the paper anaglyph glasses framework has come to represent both the time and American culture in the 1950s.

In April 1953, two films that came out in 3D revolution: "The Man in the Dark," and Warner Bros. 'Columbia Pictures' House of Wax. "This film has become famous for two reasons." The king of 3D, "the first use of stereophonic sound and the appearance of its star, Vincent Price, who became so typecast as a protagonist of the movie and horror actor sepulcheral 3D films include" El loco magician, "" dangerous mission "and" Son of Sinbad. "These tensions help to attract moviegoers of their TVs a new genus and new in theaters.

Walt Disney Studios - who later became famous for 3D films are screened at the exhibition of "imagination", EPCOT Center, Florida - Fray 3D comes with the 1953 film titled "Melody". Disney has introduced 3D to the Disneyland theme park in 1957, a short called "3D World Scout Jamboree." The late Michael Jackson starred in Disney's EPCOT 3D original film of "Captain EO," which the audience was given a plastic framed anaglyph 3D glasses, which are deposited in the bins because it ended.

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