Lectures, talks and seminars

Room 103, 81 Fairlie Terrace (FT81/103)

Presented by


Description

During 3D cinema’s popular waves (1950s, 1980s, 2010s), a continual concern was how to showcase its technological uniqueness. Using too many ‘out of the screen’ moments was considered gimmicky and a distraction from the film. Using too few raised the question: why not revert to 2D?

Similar concerns have been raised around interactive documentaries. Too much interaction becomes convoluted and distracts from the central story, whereas too little makes it hard to justify the additional technological expenditure.

As Virtual Reality (VR) reaches mainstream adoption, these concerns around visual effects and interactive components converge with the additional challenge of determining the extent to which the 360-degree field of view should be exploited. How much is too much interactivity? Is a question that informs industry practice, discussion in the press, and even academic enquiry? This paper addresses this question through analysis of past historical contexts and in relation to the practice-based research in the production of the interactive VR film 'Embodied' (in progress).


Speaker Bios

Dr Miriam Ross is Senior Lecturer in the Film Programme at Victoria University of Wellington. She works with new technologies to combine practice-based methods and traditional academic analysis. She is the author of South American Cinematic Culture: Policy, Production, Distribution and Exhibition (2010) and 3D Cinema: Optical Illusions and Tactile Experiences (2015) as well as publications and creative works relating to film industries, mobile media, virtual reality, stereoscopic media and film festivals. She is also co-founder and administrator of stereoscopicmedia.org.


For more information contact: Kathleen Kuehn or Alfio Leotta

kathleen.kuehn@vuw.ac.nz / alfio.leotta@vuw.ac.nz 04 463 6991 / 04 463 6520