Hollywood Reporter
Almost 20% of global cinema screens will be converted to digital projection by 2012, driven by a wave of 3D film releases such as Pixar’s Cannes-opener “Up” and the forthcoming James Cameron-directed “Avatar” according to new research. In its most recent digital cinema briefing, London-based film-research specialist Dodona Research said almost 12,000 screens have converted to digital projection worldwide of a total of around 110,000 globally. The research predicts that 18,000 screens are expected to have converted to digital projection by the year-end. Further out, the research firm predicts 20% of global screens will be converted for digital projection by 2012, but the global economic meltdown leaves the outlook and timetable for converting the remaining four-fifths of cinema screens to digital projection still unclear. “Cinema owners still find it hard to justify replacing their 33mm projectors with more expensive digital equipment,” the report pointed out, citing difficulties with finding a payment model to support conversion and “tougher financing terms since the onset of the banking crisis last year” as issues that have made the challenge “doubly difficult.”
BOX OFFICE FOR 3-D CATCHES EYE OF INDIES
Variety
Even though its up against big Hollywood titles, little “Coraline” is smiling sweetly at the international B.O. And it’s smiling in digital 3-D. The pic has even found a home on the top 10 foreign B.O. chart in recent days. Most of the discussion around 3-D has centered on big-budget studio tentpoles such as Disney and Pixar’s “Up” or Fox’s “Avatar,” directed by James Cameron, but there’s a wealth of 3-D titles being shopped and announced along the Croisette as a roster of production companies jump into the game.
Buzz builds home for 3-D
Variety
Audiences are becoming interested in 3-D television, and the industry must satisfy that demand for 3-D movies to thrive. That was the message from a series of panels Sunday morning at the Digital Cinema Summit held at the Las Vegas Convention Center. Phil Lelyveld, a strategy adviser for the Entertainment Technology Center at USC, hailed the momentum behind 3-D movies but warned, “If we don’t show visible progress now (on 3-D in the home), this momentum could die and move into a niche environment.”
