One consistent criticism of the medium of film is that it's flat--two-dimensional. Well, that has changed with the advent of 3D. The popular gimmick from the 1950s using red and blue lensed glasses has been updated to match our increasing desire to strap non-colored lenses onto our melons and witness an astounding third dimension. If you have seen a movie in two dimensions and another dimension becomes available can you really say that you have seen that movie? This debate will try to answer that question if we can only figure out what it means.

Jake: Watching a 3D movie is a lot like being at the mall: lots of teenagers, more expensive than it would regularly be and everything is coming right at you. In other words, watching a 3D movie is an experience I do not want to miss out on, much like leafing through books like "What to Do With a Dead Dick" at Spencer's Gifts. It might be a novelty, but so are "Weird" Al songs and everybody loves those, which is why they always chart at number one on Billboard's Hot 100. 3D adds an entire extra dimension to a film. I always add an extra star for every extra dimension, which is why I gave the 3D rerelease of Citizen Kane 5 stars just like I gave Ric Flair vs. Ricky Steamboat from Chi-town Rumble. 3D takes a movie-going experience and turns it into a life experience. My opponent hates life, which is why he spends most of his days strung out on heroin watching bugs crawl around the floor of his bungalow.

Jake: James Cameron made Avatar, a movie as three-dimensional as it is terrible. While having an extra dimension can be overwhelming at times, it offers extra thrills. My whole movie-going experience can be measured by the thrills I receive from a film. What is more thrilling than shit coming at you? Maybe skydiving, but James Cameron has yet to figure out how to develop that into a theatrical attraction. Until he does, we can up the thrill quotient via 3D glasses. And how about those glasses--aren't they comfortable? It's as if Mother Theresa or Cindy Crawford is cradling your head as you rest and try to fight back an erection. When I saw Up! in 3D I literally felt like I was going up. I would like to see Glenn describe a two-dimensional film experience so eloquently. He would probably say something like "It was really funny," which was his review for Couples Retreat and why he was fired from The Dispatch and Rock Island Argus as a film critic.

Jake: I feel like I have said nearly everything there is to say about the third dimension. Does a third dimension make comedy funnier? No, unless it's somebody throwing something at you. Does it make horror more frightening? Yes, I literally died watching SAW 3D, but luckily there were paramedics in the theater. Does it make drama more dramatic? Not really. Are film noirs even more noir? Oddly enough, yes. So, while 3D does not enhance every movie like marijuana does, it enhances it enough to make it worth it. I love when shit is coming at me. 3D is the only way to make this happen in a cinema and until science develops another way for shit to come at you, I will support 3D.
I think we really need to step back and recognize the implications for the future. This could very well lead to an insane downward spiral where we drunkenly stumble into every film with 3D glasses and novelty hats...and demand, loudly, to have shit come in our faces as hard as it can. Eventually, we’ll be clamoring to have these glasses drilled into our head so we can experience life in 3D. Even though life is supposedly already in 3D, shit does not come in our faces all the damn time.
ReplyDeleteThis will all lead to a bizarre conflict where the only resolution involves advanced neurosurgery and cybernetics that will allow our feeble minds to process vision in 4D.
Or…perhaps I should stop taking hits of LSD while watching absurd amounts of pornography with the 3D glasses I picked up from How to Train Your Dragon. I just try to live life one day at a time.
I think you raised a really good point. The problem with life is that shit isn't always coming at us. Nobody has ever done a yoyo, Chinese yoyo or paddleball in my face and I am mad as hell about it. I will, however, continue to take it. What happens in 4D? Does shit come at your brain?
ReplyDeleteSomebody once did a tetherball into my face. Way too big. I think I would better appreciate the simplicity and wonder of a paddleball or a Chinese yo-yo.
ReplyDeleteWith 4D...shit would come at your brain as hard as Republicans come forth at the mere mention of The-Former-President-That-Must-Not-Be-Named.
How precisely it would come at your brain has been seriously debated among physicists, mathematicians, 5th graders, and schitzophrenics...but imagine all of mathematics and the entire filmography of Pauly Shore suddenly come at you as hard as it can. Then put that moment on infinite repeat. That's the 4D=spacetime interpretation.
James Cameron will eventually master the cybernetic and alchemic principles required to bring this to cinema...and shit will come at us on infinite repeat. We won't even notice that it was a Dances with Wolves in Space ripoff that time around.
But my shitty small town will probably still only show the 2D edition.
Tommy is my favorite commenter!
ReplyDeleteThis article was amazing, and this comment section is awesome.
ReplyDeleteThank you for helping us with our history fair project! And Saw 3D was not even scary! I love horror movies, especially when they are gory.. Well thanks again! You guys are funny by the way.
ReplyDeleteOh, by the way.. Do you guys know when you published this? We need that for our bibliography.. Or else we'll fail..So it would be kind of you to give us the date... No pressure though.. Just two girls grades in danger... ;P
ReplyDeleteNovember 24, 2010.
ReplyDeleteThanks! (:
ReplyDelete