24 July 2024

Bwana Devil (blu-ray)


Bwana Devil

Bwana Devil, the production that launched a brief vogue for 3D films in the 1950s, will be released on blu-ray this month, making its first appearance on video. (It was never released on VHS, laserdisc, DVD, etc.) Bwana Devil, directed by Arch Oboler, wasn’t the very first 3D movie—the first commercial release in 3D was The Power of Love in 1922—but it was the film that brought 3D into the mainstream.

US cinema attendance peaked in 1946, and quickly decreased, as GIs returning from World War II settled down in the suburbs, started families, and embraced the consumer lifestyle. That same period saw a rapid rise in television ownership, and the film industry sought to differentiate the cinema experience from domestic TV viewing with 3D and widescreen processes.

Bwana Devil’s Natural Vision (anaglyph) 3D system drew audiences back to the cinema in 1952, though the 3D craze came to an end after a couple of years. Oboler attempted to revive the format in 1966, with The Bubble, filmed in a less cumbersome process known as Space Vision. (3D, edited by Britt Salvesen, is an excellent history of all forms of 3D imagery. 3-D Movies, by R.M. Hayes, was the first book on stereoscopic cinema.)

1 comment(s):

Anonymous said...

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