Who better to make that statement of James Cameron, the biggest advocate of technology - and the man behind its success. The director of the highest grossing film of all time, the revolutionary "Avatar" was at Universal Studios last week to talk about a more modest project in 3-D, Sanctuary, but no less enthusiastic about the look the future of technology.
"3-D sucks you in and makes it a visceral experience," says Cameron, the executive producer of live-action thriller in 3-D cave divers under water on a treacherous expedition.
Filmed on location in the Gold Coast in Queensland, Australia, the film has the same system in 3-D picture that Cameron developed to shoot online.
Besides being high definition cameras are much lighter and less bulky then the previous.
The filmmaker says that one of the things that attracted you to Sagrario was "the challenge of shooting high-quality 3-D - live in 3-D, not after the facts became -. In a relatively modest film budget" Then he joked that all modestly budgeted films are compared with Avatar, but his point of fact it is.
Sanctum, scheduled for release Feb. 4, is directed by Alister Grierson and co-written by Andrew Wight. The couple spent a week watching Cameron's Avatar trip which could be ready for the challenges in 3-D. Many of them involved water, which Cameron said that he had to face while you are online.
Cameron says that the filmmakers Sanctum uses the same "technology, methodology and aesthetic approach" made during the filming of "Avatar", which took place in a studio against a green screen.
0 comments:
Post a Comment