the lego movie 3d glasses

the lego movie 3d glasses

the lego movie 2d vs 3d

The Lego Movie 3d Glasses

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Click performance time to book Thu 2 Mar  17:00 Fri 3 Mar  17:00 Sat 4 Mar 13:45 Sun 5 Mar 13:45 Mon 6 Mar  17:00 Monday Super Saver All Tickets £5 Tue 7 Mar  17:00 Wed 8 Mar 13:45 Thu 9 Mar  17:00 John Wick: Chapter 2 Thu 2 Mar 20:20 Thu 2 Mar 20:30 Fri 3 Mar 20:30 Sat 4 Mar 20:30 Sun 5 Mar 20:30 Mon 6 Mar 20:30 Tue 7 Mar 20:30 Wed 8 Mar 20:30 Thu 2 Mar 17:45 Thu 2 Mar 17:30 Thu 2 Mar  17:15 Sat 4 Mar   17:30 Sun 5 Mar   17:30 Mon 6 Mar   17:30 Tue 7 Mar   17:30 Wed 8 Mar 14:30 Wed 8 Mar 17:30 Fri 3 Mar   17:15 Sat 4 Mar  14:45 Sun 5 Mar  14:45 Mon 6 Mar   17:15 Tue 7 Mar   17:15 Wed 8 Mar  14:45 Thu 9 Mar 11:00 Fri 3 Mar  18:15 Sat 4 Mar  18:15 Sun 5 Mar  18:15 Mon 6 Mar  18:15 Tue 7 Mar  18:15 Wed 8 Mar 15:45 Thu 9 Mar  18:15 The Lego Batman Movie 2D




Fri 3 Mar   18:00 Sat 4 Mar 12:45 Sun 5 Mar 12:45 The Lego Batman Movie 3D Sat 4 Mar 12:15 Sun 5 Mar 12:15 Sat 4 Mar 12:30 Sun 5 Mar 12:30 Hedda Gabler - NT Live Thu 9 Mar 19:00 Kong: Skull Island 2D Thu 9 Mar 20:00 Beauty And The Beast 2D Fri 17 Mar 13:45 Sat 18 Mar 13:45 Sun 19 Mar 13:45 Mon 20 Mar  17:00 Tue 21 Mar  17:00 Wed 22 Mar 13:45 Thu 23 Mar  17:00 Madama Butterfly - Royal Opera House Live Thu 30 Mar 19:15 Twelfth Night - NT Live Thu 6 Apr 19:00 Jewels - Royal Ballet Live Tue 11 Apr 19:15 ROSENCRANTZ AND GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD - NT LIVE Thu 20 Apr 19:00 Julius Caesar - Royal Shakespeare Company Live Wed 26 Apr 19:00 Obsession - NT LIVE Thu 11 May 19:00 Anthony And Cleopatra - Royal Shakespeare Company Live Wed 24 May 19:00 The Dream/Symphonic Variations/Marguerite & Armand - Royal Ballet Live Wed 7 Jun 19:15




Peter Pan - NT (Recorded) Sat 10 Jun 14:15 SALOME - NT LIVE Thu 22 Jun 19:00 Otello - Royal Opera House Live Wed 28 Jun 19:15 Angels In America - Part One, Millennium Approaches - NT Live Thu 20 Jul 19:00 Angels In America - Part Two, Perestroika - NT Live Thu 27 Jul 19:00 Titus Andronicus - Royal Shakespeare Company Live Wed 9 Aug 19:00 YERMA - NT LIVE Thu 31 Aug 19:00You won't get the 3d effect and you will see a double image the entire time.  3D movies work by polarizing the light you are seeing into two separate polarized filters, one for the left eye and one for the right, without the glasses you are seeing both images in both eyes and it looks blurry or like a double image (depending on the separation of those images at the time.)  If you want to see the movie in 2D in a 3D screening you'd really want to have the same polarizer in both eyes... eliminating one eye's worth of information.It may hurt your eyes easily,as it is atool that enables us live more convient




The Lego Ninjago Movie gets a poster and trailer! Published at: Feb. 8, 2017, 5:50 p.m. CST by quintFor someone suffering from as big a case of arrested development I oddly don't have much of a connection to Legos. Weird, I know, but that just means I save, like, $73,000 a year in plastic bricks. I have no idea what the hell Ninjago is but the trailer for the next Lego movie still looks good to me. If you would have told me 10 years ago that the next step in quality family animation that entertained both kids and adults would be a series of Lego movies I'd have called you nuts. So, whether your a die hard Lego nerd or someone who just likes good things you'll be able to dig this trailer. - Follow Me On Twitter3D glasses could one day become a thing of the past in movie theaters thanks to advancements from researchers at MIT(Credit: Indi Samarajiva/Flickr/CC 2.0)3D cinema might bring dinosaur jaws right up to your nose, but it's a wonder the great beasts don't just laugh when they see the oddball glasses on your head that makes the effect possible.




A new advancement from MIT takes a well-known trick known as the parallax barrier and leverages it in a way particular to how we move our heads in movie theaters. A small prototype using 50 mirrors and lenses has been developed and, if researchers can advance upon the idea, glassless 3D viewing might just become the future of cinema. Parallax barriers are the way in which some current 3D devices – like the Nintendo 3DS – deliver a multi-dimensional viewing experience direct to our eyes without the need for glasses. It basically works by arranging barriers on the screen (crystals in the case of the 3DS) that allow each of our eyes to only see certain images that are slightly different from each other. When the brain puts those images together, the main picture seems to have a three-dimensional depth. In a way, it's no different than those old-fashioned stereoscopic images that used to be sold on boardwalks everywhere. The parallax barrier approach works on the 3DS because gamers can basically hold the screen at exactly the right position to line up the barriers with each eye and make the 3D effect work (although, it should be noted that the new 3DS XL uses face-tracking technology to make keep the barriers in line for a more seamless 3D experience.)




So it works fine with small screens, but for larger screens, the issue gets more complex. Even with a television, it's difficult to pull off parallax-barrier-enhanced viewing because people sit at different heights in the room and view the TV from different angles. The problem is compounded in the large scale of a movie theater. To overcome the issue, the MIT researchers, working with engineers at Weizmann Institute for Science in Israel, realized that people don't really move around much in a movie-theater seat. Their heads have a limited range of motion constrained by the seat in which any individual is sitting. So, the scientists decided that if they could beam individual parallax-barrier-enhanced images to each seat, every person could get a 3D experience without having to wear glasses. A prototype followed that is only a little bigger than a pad of paper. Using 50 sets of mirrors and lenses, the system, which the researchers are calling Cinema 3D, beams a different set of images through parallax barriers customized to each seat in the theater.

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