Apr
19

Stereoscopic 3D after LASIK – Bring Your Corrective Lenses to the Theater

A couple months ago folks were looking on as I ran like a wild man from the entrance of an IMAX 3D theater showing Avatar in 3D. Only moments before, I had been sitting comfortably in our preferred seats (center of the theater, just above the entry aisle) when I turned to my wife and said, “Don’t let any other guy take my place honey…I forgot something in the car.” Without pausing for breath, I went tearing out of the IMAX theater because I knew the car was about six blocks away in the mall parking lot.

lasikWell, what could have been so important? I have excellent eyesight, in fact better than anyone else I know since I had my Lasik surgery. I absolutely love the fact that I can read the smallest type on grocery store products as well as see clearly into the far distance. In that regard, I am the envy of all my friends. You see, as the human eye ages, it loses its ability to adjust focus between distant objects and close ones, thus the invention of bifocal glasses. But Lasik surgery is capable of setting the focal range of your dominant eye (the left in my case) to see distant objects and the focal range of the other eye to see close objects.

The technology is so precise that they can dial in an “overlap” range between 3-6 feet in which both eyes are both able to focus. This is perfect for social interactions and computer work but anything outside that range has one eye out of focus. As long as they determine correctly which is the dominant eye, the brain interpolates the imagery seen by the “soft focus” eye. In other words, the ingredients on a grocery store item, only the “close” eye is in focus but the experience is that I am seeing clearly because of the brain’s ability to interpolate.

Lasik near and far focus effectConversely, objects at a distance are in sharp focus with the dominant eye but blurry with the other eye and the brain normally interpolates correctly EXCEPT when watching a 3D movie at the theater. The brain’s natural ability to correct the issue within the brain itself is hampered by the 3D effect.

The stereoscopic 3D technology creates two different images, one for each eye and since the 3D image is artificially produced, the brain does not do nearly as good a job interpolating the blurry image. As a result, the 3D effect isn’t completely broken but it seriously misses the mark unless I wear corrective lenses that allow both eyes to focus at the distance of the theater screen. (Interestingly, this is not a problem for 3D games or 3D computer screens which are usually viewed in the “overlap” zone where both eyes are able to focus naturally.)

So, off I went, likkety-split to get my glasses out of the car. I keep them in my car because the only other time I need them is for night driving. Needless to say, I’m glad I went through the effort because the 3D in that movie was absolutely awesome. I have heard that some people complain that they don’t like the 3D effect and I can’t imagine why…except that maybe they have had this dual-focus Lasik procedure, or for some other reason cannot focus both eyes at the distance of the theater screen. I have heard that a small percentage of people claim they’re not able to see the 3D effect at all, whether its on TVs, at the theater, or even on the new Nintendo 3DS.

Avatar in the theaterAdmittedly, if your eyes are like mine and can’t perceive the 3D effect without corrective lenses, you probably will find the 3D effect disappointing, and it may be downright annoying. If that’s your experience, I recommend getting your eyes checked and then order yourself some glasses that allow both to focus at a distance.

You are missing one of the most important and beautiful innovations in entertainment technology since movies and televisions began to broadcast in color! A lot of industry leaders fought the standardization of broadcast for HDTV resolutions a while back and we are seeing a similar advent of new technology today with stereoscopic and auto-stereoscopic 3D in all forms of entertainment. I believe it will be the standard in just a few short years.

Apr
17

Rayman 3D is a Fun Nintendo 3DS Port of a Classic

When it comes to the Nintendo 3DS games available at launch, there are several that are ports of previous titles with3D added to the gameplay. The new Nintendo 3DS title Rayman3D is among these precious gems. It’s a port of the good old Rayman 2 from Dreamcast & Nintendo 64. Its a fun filled 3D platformer requiring  at least moderate skills at gaming. The levels are worlds which you explore to find items and secrets while hunting down the goal.

I recall playing Rayman 2 on my Dreamcast back in the day and being impressed with its gameplay fun factor. Its not the hardest game around, and is fairly easy to jump into. There’s enough secrets in the large levels to keep the replay value of the game at a moderate level.  I consider it a fun game with an interesting level design. If you are a fan of the Rayman games from the past, I’d say go for it and get this port. It doesn’t have too much in the way of new content (practically nothing) but it has improved lighting, modeling, texturing etc. when compared with the original and its various ports. Rayman 3D

If it doesn’t bother you that this is a nearly identical port of an old (but fun) game, and its available on a ton of other systems, AND you have a Nintendo 3DS to play it on, I can say without a doubt that its worth having this slick looking portable version of a classic..

Keep an eye out for my upcoming review of Rabbids 3D, a spinoff from the Rayman franchise that looks like a real fun winner of a platformer!

Apr
15

James Cameron to Launch 3D Company and Embrace a 3D Future

Avatar 3D Movie James Cameron Cameron-Pace GroupDirector James Cameron and cinematographer Vince Pace are on the right track. James Cameron had the highest grossing movie of all time with his 3D movie Avatar. So he knows damn well how much 3D technology can pay off. Cameron and Pace believe in a future full of more and more 3D content in a variety of forms: 3D Movies, 3D TV Shows, 3D Games and 3D content across a multitude of easily accessed platforms. They’re betting on a 3D future and see that the stakes are high, right now, and plan to be on the forefront of this new technology.

At the NAB conference in Las Vegas last Monday they announced a plan to ramp up “industry-wide efforts to help filmmakers realize 3D’s full potential as a creative and powerful storytelling medium and accelerate the growth of the next generation of 3D solutions across all platforms” Pace said in a statement at the conference. They already have projects in the pipeline including Life of Pi, Transformers: Dark of the Moon, The Three Musketeers and the new Pirates of the Caribbean movie. They are calling themselves the “Cameron-Pace Group” and they’re planning big things, above and beyond the standard go-to of 3D movie franchises.

That’s not to say that the main focus of James Cameron’s attention is away from cinema. He boasts a prediction that all movie theaters will be able to display 3D by 2015, possibly without glasses! The technology behind auto stereoscopic or glasses-free 3D in home and at the theaters may be just the type of thing to keep 3D from becoming a passing fad. But it’s not easy, and there’s no good way of guessing when scientists will work out the huge kinks, like the image ghosting that occurs if you are viewing the 3D image from a not-quite-right angle. But according to James Cameron, once the technology for glasses-free 3d is achieved, people’s acceptance and support of it will “Go Ballistic!”

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