
I personally feel "G" was the right rating for Toy Story 3. Despite the general darkness of the incinerator scene, it was still appropriate for all ages.
Couldn't agree more. I saw it on film and then in 3D. The only major difference I noticed was that in the 3D versions simply out of focus without the glasses. Nothing more, nothing less. The best way to watch a pixar movie in theaters is through non-3D digital projection. I wish the El Capitan theater would do this more often for Pixar films.Dacey wrote:Actually, the 3-D on TS3 was barely noticable. Which seems to be the Pixar standard, for better or worse.
I know that some people like that about them, but if I'm paying the extra money, I want for the 3-D to actually be cool. What's the pont in having it if you're not going to notice it?
The 60's and 70's were just for fringe/cult value (Andy Warhol, The Stewardesses)--Ben wrote:It's actually usually every two decades (late 50s into the 60s, the late 70s into the 80s, now the 2000s).
This has been the longest run, due mainly to technological improvements and the overall quality of most of the content, but I don't think 3D will really take hold until the next cycle, around 2020, when it can be reproduced specs-free.
However, the fact that the studio is still putting it in as October "cannon fodder" two weeks before the November starting pistol (so it can be quickly evacuated afterwards), they're starting to realize it's more of an "event"--estefan wrote:but when you have something like Jack-Ass 3D making $50 million at the box-office, I think executives are looking at those grosses and realising it's not just the series' fanbase that caused those numbers.