The LA3DClub has teamed up with the Downtown Independent Theater to present screenings of independent 3-D movies in Los Angeles.
Our next scheduled show of independent 3-D will be on Wednesday, June 30, 2010, at 8pm. We will present a screening of NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD 3-D, followed by a Q&A with Producer/Director Jeff Broadstreet, Writer/Editor Robert Valding, and Cinematographer Andrew Parke.
Both an homage to and a re-imagining of the original 1968 film, this update follows a group of survivors trapped in a farmhouse battling a siege of undead zombies….in 3-D!
Barb and her brother Johnny arrive late for the burial of their aunt — and walk straight into a nightmare. With zombies on her heels, Barb flees the cemetery and is rescued by Ben, a local college student. The two seek refuge in the nearby farmhouse of the Cooper family, where the laid-back residents aren’t remotely prepared to have their lives turn into a horror movie. But Barb is destined for an even grimmer confrontation — with the pyrophobic mortician, Gerald Tovar, Jr.
Come check out LA’s only Indie-Friendly 3-D cinema. We hope to see you there!
3-D Movie Night – NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD 3-D (2006)
Wednesday, June 30th, 2010, 8:00pm
Downtown Independent Theater
251 S. Main St., Los Angeles, CA 90012
Admission to the event is:
$5 for current LA3DClub members
$10 for non-members (admission is waived with USC Student ID)
Note: Paid parking is available at many parking lots in the adjacent area. The theater is also only several blocks from the MTA Red Line.
http://www.LA3-DClub.com/
http://www.DowntownIndependent.com/
Enjoyed the film last night.
The film, in my opinion, has demonstarated what a-fairly-small-3D-budget film could do.
First of all, I never felt any pain in my eyes.
That was the biggest thing that I was very happy with.
Secondly, there are a number of cool shots where characters come in to the frame
from each side of the camera, and it had good 3D effects there.
One thing I could say how the film could have been better is that the film
should have had less shots where it tried to break the magic wall between the characters and the audience.
(EX. the guy smoking right in front of the camera blows smog to the audience….)
Those kinds of shot did call attention to themselves while I was trying to get more involved with the mood of the film.