Showing posts with label 3D film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3D film. Show all posts

Friday, November 16, 2012

3D Independent Film Competition wants your films, forever



The International 3D Society is currently running a 3D Independent Film Competition. The deadline is Dec 12th. Winners get:
- Flight and accommodations for 4 days and 3 nights in a four-star hotel in Los Angeles for the 3D Creative Arts Awards (currently scheduled February 2013). Winner will be recognized on stage at the Beverly Hills Hotel in Beverly Hills, California, USA.
- Exclusive meet-and-greet with top leaders and professionals in the 3D industry.
- A tour at one of the major Hollywood 3D studios.
- Exposure and future opportunities through Autodesk and the International 3D Society.

BUT, BE WARNED! If you enter, this section of the rules and regulations is a bag of hurt:

"X. INDEMNIFICATION
The entrant in this competition ("Owner") hereby grants the International 3D Society, Inc. and Autodesk Pictures Entertainment (“The Companies”) and their respective parents, successors, licensees and assigns, the right, but not the obligation, to incorporate the content described above in this entry (the “Property”) in any manner the Companies see fit in the 3D Independent Short Film Competition ("Production") and to use and authorize others to use the Property as so incorporated in the Production in the distribution, sale, licensing, marketing, advertising, promotion, exhibition and other exploitation of the Production in all markets and media (whether now known or hereafter developed), throughout the universe, in perpetuity. In full consideration of all rights granted herein, the Companies agree to pay to Owner, and Owner agrees to accept, a license fee of $0 (Zero Dollars)."

...in other words, by entering, you give the organizers or anyone affiliated with them the rights to sell and exploit your film however they see fit. Forever. And you get $0. Whether or not you're a winner.

So if you've got an amazing 3D film that you only want to use to make some contacts and don't care if countless organizations will profit off your hard work, this is the competition for you.

Or maybe they won't exploit your film. Maybe like the Sony 3D World competition, whose planned Blu-ray 3D release never happened, your film just won't see the light of day, other than the screening for the judges.

If you want to actually engage an audience, check out our list of 3D-friendly festivals. If you're running a 3D film competition or festival that doesn't completely fuck over filmmakers, please send us some info and we'll promote it on our blog.

Whether you're submitting your film to a festival or a competition, always read over the rules carefully. There are many organizations looking for free 3D content that will use these events to get films. While I have bragging rights for having my short films play at festivals around the world, I've had them broadcast on a 3D TV channel without my knowledge, and used to advertise a 3DTV app affiliated with another competition I entered but didn't win.

Licensing your work for free is a decision you as a filmmaker should make very carefully, to determine if exposure, possible awards, and any prestige associated with the licensee are enough to warrant the exploitation of your work for someone else's financial gain.

Friday, July 6, 2012

3D Webseries: Platform 2c

Today I was pleasantly surprised when I stumbled upon Platform 2c, a UK-based 3D soap opera webseries produced by NFD Productions and directed by Richard Connew.






While the performances and the production value vary from episode to episode, it is admirable to see people dedicated to producing a steady stream of 3D web content. You can find episodes from all four series on their YouTube channel

From their website:


"Platform 2c is a weekly quirky eclectic soap opera whose story takes place connected to and around people who use and live near Platform 2cin the Yorkshire village of Milford.  Platform 2c is unique in that all episodes are produced in 2D and digital 3D versions. Our first episode went live Sunday August 28th 2011 and we have been producing one ever since. Our format is a mini episode of around 3 mins each week ten of which go to make up a series of around 25/30 mins total playing time which equates to a standard TV soap opera episode. This will develop over time into a daily soap opera. Platform 2c is entirely non profit making and self funded with everyone involved putting in their time for free."

Monday, November 21, 2011

3D Film Festival: LES Film Festival


The LES Film Festival is accepting 3D films! This festival, devoted to films produced on a budget, takes place in the lower east side of Manhattan. In true hipster form, the films will only be screened in anaglyph.

More info on the festival after the break.


Sunday, March 13, 2011

Dogville 3D Film Festival


The Dogville 3D Film Festival (formerly FICS-3D), running April 15th & 16th, is the first stereoscopic 3D short film festival to be held in Spain. Deadline for entries is March 31st. There is no entry fee or limit on the number of entries per person.

Any works ranging from fiction, "reportage", animation, experimental, and documentary will be considered. Films can be submitted to one of three competitive categories: Professional, Amateur, and Animation. The festival's website is unclear about how it defines the distinction between "professional" and "amateur" 3D works. Winning films will be broadcast on Televisió de Catalunya, S.A. (TV3).

Their website is not available in English, but they do have an English entry regulations form for those of you interested in submitting films.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Youtube Changing The YT3D Tags





***ANOTHER EDIT*** Most of the info below is out of date, since you can now set up YouTube 3D videos without the use of tags.

While uploading, go to the "Advanced Settings" tab, under 3D Video select "This video is already in 3D", and then choose from either side-by-side or top/bottom. I recommend prepping your video as side-by-side squeezed with the left eye on the left. It's more commonly used than all the other options, and given YouTube's multiple reinventions of their 3D player, you might find in a few months that your top/bottom or side-by-side full videos don't work.

***EDIT*** - Despite Youtube posting this info earlier this month, it looks like these tags don't all work yet. Based on our quick test of a side-by-side full left/right video, changing yt3d:aspect=16:9 to yt3d:aspect=1.78:1 fixed the aspect ratio problem. The yt3d:swap tag was also still necessary to get the player to recognize the left eye frame was on the left. No word yet on when the switch to the new tags will be fully implemented, but keep these handy for when it happens. If there's some magic to these new tags that we're missing, please let us know in the comments.

From the help page:


YouTube recommends that you upload video in side-by-side squashed Left/Right. We also currently support the following formats:
  • yt3d:enable=LR: Side by side squashed left eye frame on left, right eye on right -recommended
  • yt3d:enable=RL: Side by side squashed, right eye frame on left, left eye frame on right - old format but no longer recommended
  • yt3d:enable=LonR: Top frame is left eye, bottom frame is right eye
  • yt3d:enable=RonL: Top frame is right eye, bottom frame is left eye
Note, we no longer support these tags and they should not be used:
  • yt3d:enable=true
  • yt3d:swap
  • yt3d:left
  • yt3d:right
  • yt3d:aspect

Those of you posting your own 3D films on Youtube have likely been as frustrated as me by the recent random aspect ratio changes on Youtube 3D videos. It sounds like they're eliminating support for side-by-side full left/right videos.

With the widest user base of any video service delivering 3D content, and the ability for anyone to upload content that can be watched in a dozen different formats, Youtube has done a great service to the 3D community by creating this 3D player, and a disservice by not announcing the changes to their player, or continuing support for early adopters.

Thanks to Greg Penn for sending us this info!

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

3D Nazi films?! Not really...

Unrelated trench-hopping Nazis, courtesy of the Italian Stereoscopic Archive. 
It was revealed yesterday in Variety that two 3D short films produced by the Nazis have been conveniently-just-discovered.

In what could be described as a publicity stunt for Philippe Mora's upcoming documentary on how the Nazi regime used images to manipulate reality, the director has announced he unearthed two 3D shorts, produced for Goebbels' propaganda company. Except, both are described in Ray Zone's Stereoscopic Cinema and the Origins of 3-D Film, 1838-1952, which was published in 2007, and neither were produced for Goebbels. Despite what the headlines might lead you to believe, neither of these are a top-secret 3D Triumph of the Will with stereoscopic Hitlers marching out at you.

"So Real You Can Touch It" (Zum Griefen nah, aka Close Enough to Touch, aka You Can Nearly Touch It) premiered in Berlin in May 17, 1937, and was not shown in the US. It is a "short commercial film promoting insurance", according to Zone's book, and a musical set at a carnival featuring close-ups of a barbecue, according to Variety. How manipulative!

"Six Girls Roll into Weekend" (Sechs Madels rollen ins Wochenend), was a 12-minute promotional film produced by Zeiss Ikon in 1939, prior to the outbreak of the war. It was intended for internal use, never screened in the US, and the only public screening on record was in 1941 at a meeting of the German Society for Stereoscopy in Tobis-Haus, Berlin. Variety describes the content as "what may be UFA studio starlets living it up". Oooh, I can just sense the propaganda oozing out of this one.

Despite what the article implies, the Germans weren't the first producers of 3D films. Audioscopiks was a popular 3D featurette around the same time, other 3D shorts were produced sporadically in the 20's and 30's, and 3D photography dates back to the mid 1800's. 

Know any more about these films? Post a comment!


Friday, February 11, 2011

LA 3-D Movie Festival - Call for Entries












The LA 3-D Movie Festival is back again and now accepting entries. The festival is an annual event devoted to screening independent stereoscopic 3D films, organized by members of the Los Angeles 3-D Club (Stereo Club of Southern California), which has united 3D enthusiasts to advance the science and art of stereoscopy since 1955.

Eric Kurland, President of the LA 3-D Club, is also a 3D filmmaker - he recently won Best of Show – Live Action at the Stereoscopic Displays and Applications Convention 3D Theater for his stereography on "White Knuckles 3D" by OK Go.

See their press release below for details on entering.

----

The Los Angeles 3-D Club (SCSC) is now accepting entries to the 8th
Annual LA 3-D Movie Festival. The Festival's mission is to showcase the
best independent stereoscopic 3-D filmmaking from around the world. The
festival will take place on May 14-15th, 2011, at the Downtown
Independent Theater in Los Angeles. A jury of celebrity and film
industry
judges will award prizes to the top entries. In addition, an
award will be given for the audience favorite.

Entries will be accepted in three categories:

Shorts under 10 minutes.
Shorts 10-40 minutes
Features over 40 minutes

Submission deadlines and entry fees are as follows:

$25 Early Deadline: March 18th, 2011
$30 Regular Deadline: April 1st, 2011
$40 Late Deadline: April 15th, 2011

Entry information is available at the festival website, www.LA3DFest.com


Thursday, January 27, 2011