by pinback » Thu Nov 28, 2013 3:16 pm
I have now seen Gravity.
However, you've all ruined this thread with your terrible theater-going experiences and terrible opinions.
Jonsey is correct that it is the only movie to ever truly demand 3D, or even be made better by it. It is 3D's "killer app". However, it'll probably never happen again, so this is what we get. Enjoy it.
Flack is correct in that it is brilliant at creating believability and tension throughout. Never before has such a technical marvel worked so well on a visceral level. Of course, never before has such a technical marvel existed.
Is it "up there" in terms of all-time greats? As a movie-going experience (that's the part where you experience the movie, not where you jackasses start fights and throw cokes in the theater) it is untouchable. Would it work as well in your living room on a 50" flat screen in 2D?
Time will tell. One could criticize it for having very little if any story, with no really defined characters to invest in, but 2001 is the greatest movie of all time, and its characters made the cardboard standee out in the theater lobby seem deep by comparison.
But again, as an experience, and a show of technical prowess and unrelenting suspense, absolutely incredible.
Four and a half (****1/2) stars.
I have now seen Gravity.
However, you've all ruined this thread with your terrible theater-going experiences and terrible opinions.
Jonsey is correct that it is the only movie to ever truly demand 3D, or even be made better by it. It is 3D's "killer app". However, it'll probably never happen again, so this is what we get. Enjoy it.
Flack is correct in that it is brilliant at creating believability and tension throughout. Never before has such a technical marvel worked so well on a visceral level. Of course, never before has such a technical marvel existed.
Is it "up there" in terms of all-time greats? As a movie-going experience (that's the part where you experience the movie, not where you jackasses start fights and throw cokes in the theater) it is untouchable. Would it work as well in your living room on a 50" flat screen in 2D?
Time will tell. One could criticize it for having very little if any story, with no really defined characters to invest in, but 2001 is the greatest movie of all time, and its characters made the cardboard standee out in the theater lobby seem deep by comparison.
But again, as an experience, and a show of technical prowess and unrelenting suspense, absolutely incredible.
Four and a half (****1/2) stars.