Quote:
Originally Posted by Namekuseijin
Ebert is plain wrong, as usual when he obsesses over some particular pet peeve.
Look at a mirror. Are your eyes focusing on the mirror plane or on the image double the distance from you to the mirror plane?
Just because the image is projected on a plane doesn't mean your eyes are focusing on the plane.
Stereographic 3D is a precise recording of a 3D scene as your eyes would get it from the same viewpoint. Of course, it is static in relation to that viewpoint, as you can quickly check by moving your head to the side and not getting any more 3D info as you would expect. It's good enough while full dynamic 3D isn't available as a hologram...
|
i don't think that's true for a mirror. when you look at a mirror, you focus through the mirror just as you would looking at an object. the Ebert argument seems to hold water. the mirror argument needs evidence.