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originally posted by: eluryh22
Its been a few years since I've watched a 3D movie in the theatre (I think the last one was Avatar). The main reason...? I wear glasses and the last time I viewed a 3D movie the 3D glasses provided didnt fit right over my everyday spectacles.
Has anything changed? Any "prescription glasses friendly" changes made over the past few years?
Thanks to all for any insight.
originally posted by: Skid Mark
a reply to: mOjOm
Oh well shoot. I had no idea. I have to come out from under the rock more often I guess.
originally posted by: skunkape23
The old colored lenses work fine for me...especially in black and white.
The new 3-d makes me feel like I'm watching a movie while sitting on a lawn-mower.
I walked out of 'Alice in Wonderland' half-way through.
It was making my brain hurt.
Correct me if I am wrong. I believe the new 3-d flickers the screen between 2 different angles as the lenses alternately black out and go clear at a rapid rate.
originally posted by: mOjOm
originally posted by: skunkape23
The old colored lenses work fine for me...especially in black and white.
The new 3-d makes me feel like I'm watching a movie while sitting on a lawn-mower.
I walked out of 'Alice in Wonderland' half-way through.
It was making my brain hurt.
Bummer. It had the opposite effect for me. The modern polarized 3D feels totally comfortable to me. The colored lenses after a while really strained my eyes and gave me a bit of a headache. Plus having the new ones on and looking somewhere besides the screen looks totally normal.
originally posted by: skunkape23
Correct me if I am wrong. I believe the new 3-d flickers the screen between 2 different angles as the lenses alternately black out and go clear at a rapid rate.
I think my problem may be that I have different focal lengths between my two eyes.
My left eye sees everything smaller than my right eye. When it rapidly flickers between the two it is slightly unpleasant.
Correct me if I am wrong. I believe the new 3-d flickers the screen between 2 different angles as the lenses alternately black out and go clear at a rapid rate.
If you look at an object near you and close your left and right eyes in turn, you’ll see that each has a slightly different view of the world. Your left eye sees a bit more of the left side of the object, and your right eye sees a bit more of its right side. Your brain fuses the two images together allowing you to see in three dimensions. This is known as stereoscopic vision.
To create a similar effect, 3D films are captured using two lenses placed side by side, just like your eyes (or by producing computer generated images to replicate the same effect).
In old fashioned 3D films, footage for the left eye would be filmed using a red lens filter, producing a red image, and footage for the right eye would be shot using a blue filter, resulting in a blue image. Two projectors then superimposed the images on the cinema screen.
...
As with old fashioned 3D, the film is recorded using two camera lenses sat side by side. But in the cinema, the two reels of film are projected through different polarised filters. So images destined for viewers' left eyes are polarised on a horizontal plane, whereas images destined for their right eyes are polarised on a vertical plane.
Cinema goers’ glasses use the same polarising filters to separate out the two images again, giving each eye sees a slightly different perspective and fooling the brain into 'seeing' Avatar's planet Pandora as though they were actually there.
originally posted by: skunkape23
Correct me if I am wrong. I believe the new 3-d flickers the screen between 2 different angles as the lenses alternately black out and go clear at a rapid rate.
originally posted by: mOjOm
originally posted by: skunkape23
The old colored lenses work fine for me...especially in black and white.
The new 3-d makes me feel like I'm watching a movie while sitting on a lawn-mower.
I walked out of 'Alice in Wonderland' half-way through.
It was making my brain hurt.
Bummer. It had the opposite effect for me. The modern polarized 3D feels totally comfortable to me. The colored lenses after a while really strained my eyes and gave me a bit of a headache. Plus having the new ones on and looking somewhere besides the screen looks totally normal.
I think my problem may be that I have different focal lengths between my two eyes.
My left eye sees everything smaller than my right eye. When it rapidly flickers between the two it is slightly unpleasant.
originally posted by: skunkape23
I don't do well with the 3-d. Have you ever hummed through a box-fan?
It has a similar effect on my vision. I find it distracting and annoying.
I'm good with the good old silver screen.