The Last Great Innovation: The Stereoscopic Cinema

Lenny Lipton

In February 2007, a sea change in perception took place. A full-page article in Variety magazine extolled the virtues of 3-D movies, and a few days later, an editorial in the L.A. Times stated that 3-D had to be taken seriously by the studios. Since then, a number of articles in the trades have discussed the stereoscopic cinema in positive terms. It has become the great hope of the industry after languishing for a century, primarily because recent 3-D movies are producing about three times the revenue of the simultaneously released 2-D version of films such as Chicken Little, Monster House, and Meet the Robinsons. In addition, Disney's The Nightmare Before Christmas, a 14-year-old film that had been in home release, was converted to 3-D and profitably theatrically re-released. Before February, in the trades and the popular press, the stereoscopic cinema was referred to with derision; it was a joke, to be dismissed. That is no longer the case. What has changed in addition to the better box office? In this article, I will attempt to provide a historical perspective with regard to technology introductions to the cinema, and explore the reasons for this recent change in attitude, with regard to the stereoscopic cinema.

Print ISSN
Electronic ISSN
2160-2492
Published
2007-11
Content type
Original Research
DOI
10.5594/J16034