Spiritprime
30th March 2012, 12:20 AM
Film director James Cameron is planning to release a 3D film of his pioneering Marianas Trench dive in the Pacific Ocean, it was announced last night.
Shortly after completing the 11km descent into Challenger Deep, the lowest known point on the Earth's surface, Cameron travelled to London to attend the premiere of the 3D version of his 1997 blockbuster Titanic. After the event, he told reporters that a 3D documentary of the dive, currently titled Deepsea Challenge, is being readied for a prospective cinema release later this year.
"We're shooting the whole expedition as a 3D film," Cameron said, explaining that the development of a new lightweight 3D camera, able to withstand the massive pressures at extreme depth, was crucial. "We spent a fair bit of the development budget of the sub figuring out how we would be lighting it and how we would do 3D photography at full ocean depth. We did tackle a lot of challenges but, always, the thinking was this expedition is going to get paid for by a film."
Cameron's dive was funded in conjunction with National Geographic, who have scored hits in the past with The Choir and a retooled version of the French documentary March of the Penguins. Cameron's film will also be shown on the National Geographic channel.
Cameron has made documentaries before, notably his 3D film Ghosts of the Abyss, culled from footage shot on an earlier seabed dive to the wreck of the Titanic. His 1989 film The Abyss, with Ed Harris, is also evidence of Cameron's longterm interest in deep-sea exploration, being the fictional account of a salvage team who encounter alien life underwater.
I remember two years ago he made a promise last year that he wanted to film in the deepest part of the ocean in regards to the Avatar 2 film. This was what the wikipedia had stated, coming from his exact words:
Cameron stated that they are going to widen the universe while exploring other moons of Polyphemus. The first sequel will focus on the ocean of Pandora but will also feature more of the rainforest from the original movie. Later in 2010, Cameron announced his intention to capture footage for this sequel at the bottom of the Mariana Trench using a deepwater submersible.
I see what you're doing, Mr. Cameron. I'm no fool. :D
Shortly after completing the 11km descent into Challenger Deep, the lowest known point on the Earth's surface, Cameron travelled to London to attend the premiere of the 3D version of his 1997 blockbuster Titanic. After the event, he told reporters that a 3D documentary of the dive, currently titled Deepsea Challenge, is being readied for a prospective cinema release later this year.
"We're shooting the whole expedition as a 3D film," Cameron said, explaining that the development of a new lightweight 3D camera, able to withstand the massive pressures at extreme depth, was crucial. "We spent a fair bit of the development budget of the sub figuring out how we would be lighting it and how we would do 3D photography at full ocean depth. We did tackle a lot of challenges but, always, the thinking was this expedition is going to get paid for by a film."
Cameron's dive was funded in conjunction with National Geographic, who have scored hits in the past with The Choir and a retooled version of the French documentary March of the Penguins. Cameron's film will also be shown on the National Geographic channel.
Cameron has made documentaries before, notably his 3D film Ghosts of the Abyss, culled from footage shot on an earlier seabed dive to the wreck of the Titanic. His 1989 film The Abyss, with Ed Harris, is also evidence of Cameron's longterm interest in deep-sea exploration, being the fictional account of a salvage team who encounter alien life underwater.
I remember two years ago he made a promise last year that he wanted to film in the deepest part of the ocean in regards to the Avatar 2 film. This was what the wikipedia had stated, coming from his exact words:
Cameron stated that they are going to widen the universe while exploring other moons of Polyphemus. The first sequel will focus on the ocean of Pandora but will also feature more of the rainforest from the original movie. Later in 2010, Cameron announced his intention to capture footage for this sequel at the bottom of the Mariana Trench using a deepwater submersible.
I see what you're doing, Mr. Cameron. I'm no fool. :D