Traveller, on 25 December 2012 - 07:59 PM, said:
huh, me too. I found the first scenes of the film took some getting used to, as only certain areas of the screen were in focus. In Bag End, the depth of the hallway and rooms were there, but I didn't like the dark borders that just seemed blurry to me, and wasted the giant screen as I was only looking a small part of it. I got on with the 3D better later on, but again, the depth of the caves etc was good, but I didn't feel like faces were coming right out of the screen or anything. I kept closing one eye to remove the 3D when I thought it was distracting me from what was on screen.
I know from using my camera that I've got one eye slightly weaker than the other though, so maybe that's why I've never been really impressed with 3D? It always looks false to me, like a lot of layers of flat scenery.
Well, since I was about 12, I had one eye significantly weaker than the other. I was apparently using my far-sighted eye for distance vision and my near-sighted eye for close work. At 14, they made me wear a contact lens in my near-sighted eye to even things up. The only thing that happened was that my "good" eye got weaker and I had to wear glasses for both eyes, which I am still bitter about. I have never once been able to see those magic pictures where you look at a mish-mash of colours, cross your eyes, and a 3D picture emerges. I got laser eye surgery last year and I'm supposed to be 20/20 in both eyes now, but I guess my brain has been processing depth a certain way for so long that I still can't see 3D. It's kind of bummer. My husband says that when Galadriel was talking, she was so close he could have leaned over and kissed her. That would have been pretty cool for me for part 2 or 3, whichever one Legolas shows up in.
However, I have to say I really enjoyed Goblin Town. This team is just so good at making everything look exactly how I picture it. Rivendell, Hobbiton, Bag End, Gollum's lake, etc look just like I always thought. If it is something I hadn't really pictured, when I see it, I
know it looks exactly the way it should, which really brings Middle Earth to life for me. I feel like I'm seeing a vision of Middle Earth as it is, never like I'm looking at "Peter Jackson's version" of the world. I don't know if I can explain what I'm trying to say. It kind of like how when I watch the movie, there are times where it's very obvious I'm watching a "Peter Jackson's interpretation" on the story. For instance, they made the dwarves' quest more about birthright and home and a place to belong and restoring lost glory, where really in the book it's really all about the treasure and not much more. It brings me out of the story sometimes. But the sets always look perfect and when I get transported, I stay transported.