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"They were sort of treated as a red-headed stepchild, and then everybody cried that it was costing them too much because there were two entire crews," he said. Instead, there's going to be one combined 3-D/2-D production, Cameron said. Pace said viewers have gotten beyond the prettiness of 3-D and need the technology to take a back seat to the creative elements, brought by traditional directors and producers, that make entertainment work. "What they're bringing to the table is the whole foundation of the whole presentation, the whole basis of the entertainment," he said. Broadcasters, however, should make sure they're ready for 3-D, Cameron said. It's inevitable that the technology will be universally adopted, he said. The director said he thinks a big rush in 3-D will come if technology to watch 3-D without glasses becomes easier to put in TV sets. "At that point, I think the people who are first and foremost as leaders of 3-D content creation are going to be the winners in the overall marketplace, the overall broadcast market," Cameron said. "That's my own personal prediction. "A lot of people would say that I've just kind of drunk my own Kool-Aid, but everything we've predicted about 3-D has come true and, for the most part, ahead of schedule."
[Associated
Press;
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