'Nightmare Before Christmas' took the honour of first re-rendered 2D-into-3D away from 'Grease', which appears stuck in the Dimensionalization(tm) equivalent of development hell. Yet the director behind the film, Randall Kleiser, appears to have caught the stereoscopic bug (along with Lucas, Cameron and half of Hollywood). The Hollywood Reporter has a
story that he and his business partner have patented a technology for stereoscopic display in electronic screens:
Director Randal Kleiser and inventor Michael Mehrle are introducing a technology designed to enable the viewing of 3-D content on such mobile devices as PDAs and iPods without the use of special glasses.
Their startup, Neovision Labs, has developed this unique technology called iFusion, which is patent pending.
In addition to offering a new capability to consumers, Kleiser, whose credits include "Grease" and "Honey I Blew Up the Kid," and Mehrle believe this unique technology has the potential to help forward the 3-D movement by giving the studios a venue in which to repurpose their 3-D-produced content after its theatrical release.
It is not aimed at cinemas, but they are already going digital 3D anyway, but for the great market beyond:
The attachment would be secured over the device screen. Mehrle said the attachment would be marketed as an accessory for hand-held devices and would list for about $50.
This technology does not convert a 2-D film to 3-D; rather, consumers would download 3-D content to the device for viewing. The content could be animated or live-action films produced in 3-D or films that were produced in 2-D and later converted to 3-D (like "Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas"). In addition to features, 3-D shorts, 3-D special-venue films and other such content could be used with the system.
The content has to be specially encoded for this application. "Basically, it's zero added costs. You can do it on a laptop," Mehrle said.
Kleiser said he hopes this development would help grow 3-D production. As a director, he is excited about the possibilities that 3-D offers to filmmakers. "The director wants to make the audience feel visually like part of the story; that's what 3-D does," Kleiser said. "Directors have another tool that they can use for dramatic emphasis. (Images) could come out of the screen into their faces, the way we would use a close-up."
Let's see if 'Grease' in digital 3D comes to a cell phone near you any time soon.
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