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What will films be like in 20 years?

The subsequent technological developments have opened huge horizons in the field of film and Luke Buckmaster asks some experts about the future of motion picture films? Decades ago, some predicted the emergence of virtual reality films that would allow the viewer to fully immerse themselves in motion picture film. In 1955, cinematographer Morton Heilig predicted, in an article titled "Cinema in the Future", that the motion picture industry would see a great development in the future as "the viewer will experience new scientific experiments with all his senses and will move them to consciously interact with the details of their events. " Heligg mentioned many of the characteristics of virtual reality technology, without mentioning them by name, because the term had not yet been coined. And now this future that he predicted we live now, even if we are still a long way from virtual reality that has appeared in some movies and television series and it affects the mind, making us lose the ability to distinguish between reality and imagination. The current phase of the film industry, in which 360-degree cameras have replaced traditional film cameras, can be compared to the period between the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth century, which saw the first experiments in cinematography. In short, we are witnessing the beginning of a revolution in the field of cinema, as subsequent technological developments - such as the spread of augmented reality technology, artificial intelligence and the growing ability of computers to control digital worlds - have opened horizons. unlimited for the film industry. private experiences Chris Milk, an artist and virtual reality tech expert, believes films in the future will provide special experiences tailored to the choices of each viewer individually. In an interview with the BBC, Chris states that these experiences "will allow you to shape the story as it is presented, to satisfy your tastes on your own and satisfy your whims and tendencies." Milk prefers to describe these experiences as "living the details of the story" rather than "telling the story" as it is now. He believes cinematic experiences will evolve so that they feel natural and real as you live a normal day in your life, but they have the characteristics of thrilling stories we are used to hearing.In one of the lectures he gave at the TED conference in 2015, on the technical horizons of virtual reality, Milk saw that new developments in the field of artificial intelligence would allow computer-created characters to interact with the audience during the presentation of the film. , and Milk compared them to the advanced form of the personal assistant "Siri". ', but it is embodied as a character in a movie. While Melk doesn't deny that these characters who are able to speak and interact with you in the film as if they were human beings like you haven't appeared up to this point, but he believes we could see them anytime, even 20 years ago. 3D space Noni de la Peña, a journalist and documentarian nicknamed the "mother of virtual reality" by the Wall Street Journal, says that the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about the future of films is "3D space", which is in contrast to films. The two-dimensionality we see on screens today. "2D movies will continue to play on screens, as will radio, which will not disappear from our lives, but the film industry will inevitably evolve," says de la Pena. He adds: "The films will show embodied experiences, allowing you to walk around them and interact with them in a three-dimensional environment, because young audiences, who are used to embodied experiences, want everything in their life to be embodied, give their views on their upbringing. ".
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