I've seen a bunch of 3d stuff and most recently Beowulf 3D and on the one hand, I think it's great that a movie like Beowulf can get shown at the local multiplex in 3d with very little fuss... I paid $3 for a pretty cool pair of Ray-Ban like 3D glasses and it felt like an added-value experience, and I think with HD and home theaters becoming so prominent and more attainable at a consumer level... movie studios and movie theaters are going to need to do everything they can to make going to the movies an added value experience.
On the other hand, seeing Beowulf in 3d in terms of the actual film was a bit distracting, it looked like it was shoehorned into 3d and had a lot of kind of what amounted to sight gags rather than a movie that was really exploring the medium and the new media.
I think "Avatar" is going to cause a huge buzz for the format, James Cameron is shooting it with the intention of showing it in 3d, rather than converting it to 3d after the fact. I think that is what's going to make the difference in terms of bringing the audience "into" the format and the experience rather than it being more of a "fourth wall" that one has to get through.
I've said it before though.. I think Star Wars 3d would be a bad idea.. the movies weren't shot for 3d, the images were composed and photographed with the intention of being on a flat surface, and I can't see how the SW movies would look like anything but a moving pop up book, but it's a gimmick, and it'll get people to go to the movies.
I'd say be on the lookout for things like "Avatar" and the movies that follow that where the cameras that Cameron is using really come into their own, that'll be a great benchmark for where the technology is going. And hope they don't invent smell-o-vision...
And hope they don't have blasters
