Agreed. I’ve looked at three possibilities. Avatar is the obvious choice—groundbreaking for 3D, especially the depth of field in the forest scenes. But honestly, everyone chooses that. We need something unique.
Yes, but the professor warned us that children’s films, even artistic ones, sometimes get marked down unless you focus strictly on the technical side. Hugo is beautiful, but the 3D effects are subtle. For our presentation, we need something where the 3D is impossible to ignore.
I love that idea. But we have to check the availability of clips. The university library has Gravity on Blu-ray 3D, but the equipment to play it is only in room 4B, and it’s booked all next week.
Agreed. I’ve looked at three possibilities. Avatar is the obvious choice—groundbreaking for 3D, especially the depth of field in the forest scenes. But honestly, everyone chooses that. We need something unique.
Yes, but the professor warned us that children’s films, even artistic ones, sometimes get marked down unless you focus strictly on the technical side. Hugo is beautiful, but the 3D effects are subtle. For our presentation, we need something where the 3D is impossible to ignore.
I love that idea. But we have to check the availability of clips. The university library has Gravity on Blu-ray 3D, but the equipment to play it is only in room 4B, and it’s booked all next week.