happyfilmluvguy
Call Me a Cab
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A 70 foot screen isn't exactly something you can fit in your living room, and you more than likely can't find one that's affordable. Your only other option is to take a seat, amongst 700 others, and stare up at that giant screen, your eyes fixed on the images projecting across it. This is the movie theater. Your night out on a Saturday, the location of your first date, or just your place to escape. But ever since the release of movies like Sky Captain, the creators of those images are now talking.
With the release of 300, I thought it was a good time for a deep discussion in the future of the movies. With innovative technology like facial mapping and blue screens (which have been around since the 50s), as well as high definition, there is more than likely going to be a change in the way movies are made and seen.
Sin City, Sky Captain, and 300 all have two things in common, and it's not their technology. It's that their processes are cost effective and less time consuming. While normally with a set, make up, actors, etc, take up to 3 years to complete a movie and costing millions of dollars, these films are made in 60 days or less, costing around $10 million or so, and making hundreds of millions of dollars in the box office and DVD sales.
Sooner or later, the industry is going to go completely digital, with many films, at the most, being done on a blue screen, with their share of computer graphics, but first they will start cancelling out positions like set design, costume design, and make up. With innovative things like this, there is no need for these positions. At least a physical person to make the costumes, build the set, or powder the actors faces. They still will be needed as guidance.
Some day even, the only way you will see a movie will be on your computer, because it is also cost effective to distribute a film online, rather than it is to millions of theaters around the world. It's all about the money.
What do you think will be the future of film making?
With the release of 300, I thought it was a good time for a deep discussion in the future of the movies. With innovative technology like facial mapping and blue screens (which have been around since the 50s), as well as high definition, there is more than likely going to be a change in the way movies are made and seen.
Sin City, Sky Captain, and 300 all have two things in common, and it's not their technology. It's that their processes are cost effective and less time consuming. While normally with a set, make up, actors, etc, take up to 3 years to complete a movie and costing millions of dollars, these films are made in 60 days or less, costing around $10 million or so, and making hundreds of millions of dollars in the box office and DVD sales.
Sooner or later, the industry is going to go completely digital, with many films, at the most, being done on a blue screen, with their share of computer graphics, but first they will start cancelling out positions like set design, costume design, and make up. With innovative things like this, there is no need for these positions. At least a physical person to make the costumes, build the set, or powder the actors faces. They still will be needed as guidance.
Some day even, the only way you will see a movie will be on your computer, because it is also cost effective to distribute a film online, rather than it is to millions of theaters around the world. It's all about the money.
What do you think will be the future of film making?