James Cameron to stick with 3-DDirector eyes the true story 'Dive'May 15, 2008, 10:59 PM ET
James Cameron is looking to continue his pioneering stereoscopic
3-D efforts -- though not necessarily with a big action movie or
visual effects-laden project like "Avatar."
"After 'Avatar,' I want to do something a lot smaller," Cameron said Thursday. On the director's sonar is "The Dive," a true story about the romance between controversial Cuban free diver Francisco "Pipin" Ferreras and Frenchwoman Audrey Mestre. Under his guidance, Mestre became a free diver who broke several world records but died in 2002 while competing. (Free-diving competitors must hold their breath for long periods of time while deep under water.) "It's a drama, a love story," Cameron said. "This will require underwater photography, which will look gorgeous in 3-D." When dramatic 3-D is achieved, Cameron believes it could bring about "the kind of uncomfortable feeling that people like in a movie theater; they feel like they are being challenged. It can actually be quite powerful. "I think (3-D for drama) is the big overlooked area (now) because the economics don't really drive that direction." Cameron added that action and computer animation will likely drive the 3-D market for a while, but with the infrastructure gains on the way, he expects that will change. "The visual aesthetic of doing dramatic stuff in 3-D is very simple," he said. "Just don't remind people that they are watching a 3-D movie. That will take them out of the experience." Ferreras was a central figure in a 2001 Imax documentary, "Ocean Men: Extreme Dive." "Avatar" is scheduled to open Dec. 18, 2009. James Cameron to stick with 3-DDirector eyes the true story 'Dive'May 15, 2008, 10:59 PM ET
James Cameron is looking to continue his pioneering stereoscopic 3-D efforts -- though not necessarily with a big action movie or visual effects-laden project like "Avatar."
"After 'Avatar,' I want to do something a lot smaller," Cameron said Thursday. On the director's sonar is "The Dive," a true story about the romance between controversial Cuban free diver Francisco "Pipin" Ferreras and Frenchwoman Audrey Mestre. Under his guidance, Mestre became a free diver who broke several world records but died in 2002 while competing. (Free-diving competitors must hold their breath for long periods of time while deep under water.) "It's a drama, a love story," Cameron said. "This will require underwater photography, which will look gorgeous in 3-D." When dramatic 3-D is achieved, Cameron believes it could bring about "the kind of uncomfortable feeling that people like in a movie theater; they feel like they are being challenged. It can actually be quite powerful. "I think (3-D for drama) is the big overlooked area (now) because the economics don't really drive that direction." Cameron added that action and computer animation will likely drive the 3-D market for a while, but with the infrastructure gains on the way, he expects that will change. "The visual aesthetic of doing dramatic stuff in 3-D is very simple," he said. "Just don't remind people that they are watching a 3-D movie. That will take them out of the experience." Ferreras was a central figure in a 2001 Imax documentary, "Ocean Men: Extreme Dive." "Avatar" is scheduled to open Dec. 18, 2009.
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