FILM U2 3D

Film  U2 3D    IMDbIMDb Discussion board  
Code U23DD
  U2 3D
Genre Documentary / Music
Director Catherine Owens  IMDb, Mark Pellington  IMDb
Actors  Bono, Adam Clayton, Larry Mullen Jr., The Edge, U2
Cat Premiere
Year 2007
Release January 2008 (limited)
Country USA
Runtime 85 min
Format Color, Sony HDCam
   
Dynamic
Synopses

Concert film of rock band U2 as they trek from Argentina, Mexico, Chile and Brazil. 
- Yahoo! Movies

A 3-D presentation of U2's global "Vertigo" tour. Shot at seven different shows, this production employs the greatest number of 3-D cameras ever used for a single project.
- IMDb

It goes without saying that U2 3D is not merely a concert film; it is a concert experience—and one that will leave you fumbling around on the ground for your jaw. An electrifying collage of South American stadium concerts during U2’s 2006 tour, U2 3D mobilizes digital 3-D and surround-sound technology to plunge us into almost supernatural proximity to the musicians. Whether it’s dropping into The Edge’s sonic orbit or passing over the crowd through a sculptural sea of outstretched arms, we’re no longer on the outside looking in, but on the inside looking in—a perspective shift whose novelty is at first delightfully odd, and then pure revelation. The sense of intimacy with the audience is uncanny, as if Bono has stepped right off the screen to spend a moment with us, his extended hand mere inches from our face. Featuring songs that have touched fans for years, from “Sunday Bloody Sunday” and “One” to ”Beautiful Day” and “Vertigo,” U2 3D establishes a visceral bond that’s completely unprecedented in film.

U2 has always understood the power of multisensory engagement in conveying its message, in this case, coexistence, so it’s not surprising that the band would be inspired to explore the immersive possibilities of 3-D. Call them polarized or rosy, from behind these glasses, the world may indeed be a place of peace and hope.
- Sundance Film Guide

   
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  Cinematical
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Misc Info

ExP: Sandy Climan, Michael Peyser, David Modell

Pr: Jon Shapiro, Peter Shapiro, John Modell, Catherine Owens

Ci: Peter Anderson, Tom Krueger

Ed: Olivier Wicki 

Mu: Carl Glanville

3-D/DigPr: Steve Schklair

   
  from AP: site
  U2-3D premiere at Sundance festival:
The global premiere of U2's 3D Vertigo Tour concert film will be screened at one of the world's top film festivals.  U2-3D will be shown as one of a number of world premieres at the Sundance Film Festival in Utah.  The film was shot primarily in Buenos Aires and other South American locations.  It is scheduled to open at Cineworld Dublin, Movies@Dundrum, Movies@Swords and SGC Dungarvan in late February.  Negotiations with other digital cinemas are reported to be continuing ahead of its release date.
   
  USAToday
  U2 3D
Whom it's for: Rock fans, especially those seeking a front-seat ticket for a 10th of the concert price.

The story: A three-dimensional concert film assembled from the Irish superband's worldwide Vertigo tour. Bono, Larry Mullen Jr., The Edge and Adam Clayton allow the camera to act as a kind of fifth band member prowling the stage. And animation is added to some performances. Director Catherine Owens says she told the band: "We're just about the intimacy, the relationship between the four of you and how that seeps out to the audience and what the audience gives you back."

Of note: A sequence during the song Love and Peace where Bono mimics an intimate telephone call and the empty space in front of him becomes animation: a globe emerges, a baby develops inside it and the umbilical cord becomes the line of the phone. "One of the animators reflected that piece of animation in Bono's glasses," Owens says, adding a subliminal realism. "It's a psychological experience in the back of your brain."
   
  from Cinematical: link
 

The Exhibitionist: You Too Need to See 'U2 3D'

Posted Jan 20th 2008 9:32AM by Christopher Campbell



When The Jazz Singer arrived in theaters in 1927, it was far from perfect. In fact, despite heralding the arrival of sound pictures, its audio was quite poor in quality, and it would take many years before the sound in sound films would be accepted as natural. But The Jazz Singer will forever be remembered in the film history books. I'm not so sure that U2 3D will hold the same kind of prestige as that film, but it ought to, because as the first live-action digital 3D film, it is certainly opening the door for a brand new kind of movie experience, one that will likely be the standard in coming decades, if not years.

The problem with U2 3D's prestige could be that it is neither the first 3D movie, nor is it the first digital 3D film. But people have never seen anything like this before, enough that we could consider those early analog 3D films the equivalent of D.W. Griffith's failed 1921 sound film Dream Street, which used poorer technology than The Jazz Singer. And we could consider those recent animated digital 3D movies as the equivalent of the 1926 film Don Juan, which featured a synched soundtrack of music and sound effects, yet no dialogue. Anyway, what I'm saying is that U2 3D must be seen, not necessarily because it's a great film, but because it's an important film, and you can say you saw it when.

Not much of a U2 fan? Well, I'm not either. I've never owned a U2 album (though I will admit to liking most of the band's early singles), and I never had any interest in seeing them live, let alone seeing a concert film of them performing. However, while most concert films are limited to fan appeal -- unless Martin Scorsese or some other great filmmaker shoots them -- U2 3D is obviously different. Plus, it was co-directed by well-known music video director-turned-Hollywood-player Mark Pellington (Arlington Road) and video maker Catherine Owens, who is best known for directing U2's "Original of the Species" video and content for the band's multimedia-filled Zoo TV tour.

Not being a fan, I actually had planned to only watch a little bit of U2 3D, just enough to appreciate the new technology. But I was sucked in completely and watched the whole film -- not because I suddenly became a U2 fan, but because I couldn't tear the Dolby Digital 3D glasses from my face. I kept thinking I might miss some neat way the 3D was used in the presentation of this Buenos Aires-set show. Fortunately, the 3D increasingly gets more interesting as the film goes on. When the band comes back on stage for their encore song, "The Fly," the screen (and seemingly the space in front of it) is filled with a ton of graphics and words that really blow your senses away. If you're familiar at all with the video of "The Fly" featured on the Zoo TV DVD, it's kind of like that, but in 3D!

Certainly the first idea that pops into your mind while watching U2 3D is that it's like actually being there in the stadium with all those Argentine fans. In fact, after the screening I attended, I overheard someone tell his companion that it was just like going to a concert without all the annoying parts. And yes, there are plenty of shots from the perspective of the audience, where you actually have fans standing in your way, obstructing your view with their camera phones and shoulder-seated girlfriends. But the best footage in the film is from above, especially those shots looking down at the drum set, which definitely looks the most real in 3D, and those shots close up on the band members. You really notice the depth of the digital 3D imaging when looking at Bono's eyes through his ugly, yellow-tinted specs, and realizing they actually look like they're situated behind the lenses.

But alas, as I mentioned, the look of U2 3D is not perfect in the least. Too much of the film looks like a 2D image layered atop a 2D image, giving something of a 3D illusion without actually appearing in the round. This problem is most noticeable in some of the shots from the crowd and is worst during shots in which a microphone stand is the most foreground object. Other faults include a ghosting effect when the camerawork is too fast, and a number of moments in which there is no 3D look or feel at all. The film boasts that it is the first live-action 3D movie to feature camera zooms, but few of these zooms appear to work for the technology nearly as much as the stationary shots.

Of course, there are a lot of awkward moments in The Jazz Singer, and with today's developments in sound recording, the film feels even less of an achievement in retrospect. U2 3D isn't quite as disappointing as The Jazz Singer, though. Maybe this is because we haven't yet seen the improvements on live-action digital 3D that we'll have in the future, and maybe in eighty years the film will look terrible in comparison to what we know then. But for now, it's the best thing we've got and that's not really a complaint at all.