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I'd love to see the 3D version in my home theater, to see how it measures up, but not enough to replace my two year old Epson front projector with a 3D one.
Still, if you're in the market, this seems like a heckuva way to get your 3D library started, and the stuff Panasonic's throwing in is a pretty good incentive as well. Not only that, but in my experience Panasonic's plasmas, even their 2D ones, are terrific, so it isn't as if you'd be slumming just to get "Avatar."
My advice? Get the biggest screen you can afford – or can fit into your room! I'm hooked on the richness of the plasma TV's picture (2D or 3D) and if I could afford a 106 incher to replace my projector (and if it would fit down the stairs to my home theater, which it wouldn't), I'd be watching "Avatar" in 3D right now – and you'd be spared from having to read my rants!
Say what you will about Cameron's CG epic, it's a stunning technical achievement and a ripping yarn as long as you haven't seen "Dances with Wolves" recently. And as mentioned, it looks fantastic on Blu-ray, even in 2D.
If you haven't experienced 3D yet, and care about it, I recommend sallying forth to your local electronics outlet for a demo. Most of the ones in my neck of the woods have such demos set up, though they're often pretty lousy and won't give you the best look you could get. But it's better than nothing.
You can sometimes find better demos. Panasonic and Sony have both done road show-type demos at a variety of venues, with a travelling road show designed to showcase 3D in a better light. I saw Sony's at the Honda Indy Edmonton race last summer, and Panasonic is just wrapping up its "Unwrap 3D Tour," a two week, 14 city tour of U.S. malls, in which they gave consumers a chance to experience 3D under controlled conditions meant to show off the technology at its best.
I didn't see this specific Pansonic demo, but I've seen others and they're quite compelling. And while I haven't seen a video game in 3D yet, I can see how they could be a real blast, especially if it's a driving simulator or first person shooter.
But while the industry talks big about the potential for 3D – with TV and live sports events as well as movies, I'm still not convinced it's going to catch on, especially as long as you have to buy expensive glasses to exploit it.
Broadcasters can spew all the 3D movies, TV programs and sports events they want but, at about two hundred bucks a pop for the glasses, who other than the particularly well-heeled is going to shell out for a dozen sets just so they can throw a Superbowl or Indy 500 party, then have the glasses sit in the home theater gathering dust the rest of the time?
It just doesn't make sense. Of course, I've been wrong before. Heck, I thought we'd all be watching laserdiscs by now!
Copyright 2010 Jim Bray
TechnoFile.com
Jim Bray's columns are available through the TechnoFile Syndicate.