How to Train your Dragon
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How to Train your Dragon
Here are (I hope) the first ever insider drawing of "How to Train your Dragon" movie...
I'm crossing my fingers these are indeed the first images out there otherwise I'll have egg all over my face again.
marketsaw.blogspot.com/2008/01/sneak-peak-at-how-to-train-your-dragon.html
I'm crossing my fingers these are indeed the first images out there otherwise I'll have egg all over my face again.
marketsaw.blogspot.com/2008/01/sneak-peak-at-how-to-train-your-dragon.html
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Re: How to Train your Dragon
Thanks for the concept arts .
I like the idea thought the concept arts themselfs arn't really good in my opinion but that's how it is with concept arts.
I thought it's about fairy tale like dragons,not Viking like dragons but we allready had that in Shrek so Viking is more original,did Viking had any dragons?.
I like the idea thought the concept arts themselfs arn't really good in my opinion but that's how it is with concept arts.
I thought it's about fairy tale like dragons,not Viking like dragons but we allready had that in Shrek so Viking is more original,did Viking had any dragons?.
[img]http://i43.tinypic.com/bfqbtk.jpg[/img]
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Some people may not think twice about it but I think there are going to be a lot of people that will take a second look or consider seeing the film because they think it is something revolutionary. It's kind of whetting their appetite for something new and exciting. It will get people talking, like we are now. And when they bring up the topic of ultimate 3d they will mention this movie, therefore possibly making more people aware of it who might not have thought about it otherwise.
Hm... I might have just confused myself, it's what I get when I'm tired.
The title is kind of silly but it is "different" and generating a lot of talk.
Hm... I might have just confused myself, it's what I get when I'm tired.
The title is kind of silly but it is "different" and generating a lot of talk.
[img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v188/Foxtale/almostthere_signature_smaller.jpg[/img]
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I personally am 100 percent AGAINST the idea of producing films in 3D only with no traditional version. Watching something in 3D once, maybe twice, would be good for a novelty but I wouldn't want to watch it that way every time. What they ought to do, even though it requires more work, is to produce both 3D and traditional versions, putting the same amount of care and effort into each, and release both in a single dvd package. That way you satisfy both segments of the market and don't have to worry about potential backlash.
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Eddievalient,
According to the following article, Katzenberg suggests it is unlikely that we will see 3-D movies in the home any time soon (maybe three to four years).
www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_di ... af921?pn=1
Also, I doubt very much any of the studio would come out with movies in 3-D only simply because not all theatres around the world will be equipped with 3-D projectors by 2009.
According to the following article, Katzenberg suggests it is unlikely that we will see 3-D movies in the home any time soon (maybe three to four years).
www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_di ... af921?pn=1
Also, I doubt very much any of the studio would come out with movies in 3-D only simply because not all theatres around the world will be equipped with 3-D projectors by 2009.
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I recently saw a demo of 3D for the home using the same system as movie theaters use now.
It was okay, but no-where near as good as a theater. The flatscreen TV needs to be of sufficient size (this was a 50inch) and it needs to run on DLP technology instead of the cheaper LCDs that have become the norm. You're still required to wear the polarising specs, but most of all was the cost, between $8000 and $12000 for a system, including the right kind of Blu-Ray player.
It was fairly impressive, but still, films need to be framed with this content in mind - and most then don't work in their flat versions. The demo they had playing featured a girl on a swing - okay, as long as she didn't swing out of frame. It was pretty disconcerting to see her body coming towards us, out of the screen, and then see her head vanishing as she emerged further than the boundaries of the framing.
3D in the home still has a LONG way to go!
It was okay, but no-where near as good as a theater. The flatscreen TV needs to be of sufficient size (this was a 50inch) and it needs to run on DLP technology instead of the cheaper LCDs that have become the norm. You're still required to wear the polarising specs, but most of all was the cost, between $8000 and $12000 for a system, including the right kind of Blu-Ray player.
It was fairly impressive, but still, films need to be framed with this content in mind - and most then don't work in their flat versions. The demo they had playing featured a girl on a swing - okay, as long as she didn't swing out of frame. It was pretty disconcerting to see her body coming towards us, out of the screen, and then see her head vanishing as she emerged further than the boundaries of the framing.
3D in the home still has a LONG way to go!
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I certainly hope that they wouldn't start releasing these things in 3-D only. I don't have a digital theater near me, so I wouldn't be able to see the movies at all if they did that.CGIFanatic wrote: Also, I doubt very much any of the studio would come out with movies in 3-D only simply because not all theatres around the world will be equipped with 3-D projectors by 2009.
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Wow....Chris Sanders is now directing How to Train Your Dragon! (Crood Awakening as well.)
http://www.cartoonbrew.com/feature-film ... n#comments
http://www.cartoonbrew.com/feature-film ... n#comments
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!
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Let me get in here a bit....
I don't think when it hits the market that it will be much more than a standard LCD tv. It won't even be double the price, eventually.
And yes, they DO work in their flat versions. I've done plenty of dual-release movies (3 now, counting Bolt). They work.
Not necessarily. I just saw a kickass one that was LCD.Ben wrote:The flatscreen TV needs to be of sufficient size (this was a 50inch) and it needs to run on DLP technology instead of the cheaper LCDs that have become the norm.
The one I saw didn't have a price, but it used a standard blu-ray player.You're still required to wear the polarising specs, but most of all was the cost, between $8000 and $12000 for a system, including the right kind of Blu-Ray player.
I don't think when it hits the market that it will be much more than a standard LCD tv. It won't even be double the price, eventually.
The one I saw had both versions of the movie on the same Blu-ray disk. Those disks are plenty big enough to handle both versions.It was fairly impressive, but still, films need to be framed with this content in mind - and most then don't work in their flat versions.
And yes, they DO work in their flat versions. I've done plenty of dual-release movies (3 now, counting Bolt). They work.
That's the fault of the people making that video. You don't have that problem if you float a 3-d window out in front of the girl. That's standard with Disney Digital 3D.The demo they had playing featured a girl on a swing - okay, as long as she didn't swing out of frame. It was pretty disconcerting to see her body coming towards us, out of the screen, and then see her head vanishing as she emerged further than the boundaries of the framing.
Nope. Honestly, it could be done right now.3D in the home still has a LONG way to go!