Advertisement

‘Sherlock’ sequel may join ‘Last Airbender’ and ‘Green Hornet’ in 3-D parade

Share

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

Is Hollywood out of its depth with this mad race toward 3-D? The bandwagon is rolling fast and there appears to be no handbrake; the ‘Sherlock Holmes’ sequel may be among the next passengers, according to an exclusive report bySteven Zeitchik at 24 Frames, our sister blog. Here’s an excerpt:

With M. Night Shyamalan’sThe Last Airbender’ and Michel Gondry’sThe Green Horneteach now getting a type of conversion treatment -- and seemingly every other upcoming film engaged in a 3-D discussion of some kind -- the English detectives may not be far behind. The sequel to the Guy Ritchie/Robert Downey/Jude Law holiday hit ‘Holmes’ -- which continues to tear it up on DVD -- is moving closer to the development finish line. And as it does, the conversations about shooting it in 3-D are heating up.

Advertisement

We caught up with Kieran and Michele Mulroney, the writers on the ‘Holmes sequel’ as well as the writer-directors on new indie release ‘Paper Man,’ and the pair told us that there have been a number of serious conversations at Warner Bros. about conceiving and producing the new ‘Holmes’ in 3-D. The discussions are still underway, but both writers, at least, were open to it.

Although they each worry what would happen if every film Hollywood churns out is turned into a z-axis spectacle, they think it makes sense here. ‘Sherlock would be great in 3-D,’ Kieran says. Speaking generally of the 3-D craze, he added that ‘the wind keeps moving in that direction...’

THERE’S MORE, READ THE REST.

-- Steven Zeitchik

RECENT AND RELATED

Jim Cameron, cinema prophet? ‘Moving a mountain is nothing’

‘Star Wars’ and ‘The Matrix’ in 3D?

Advertisement

24 FRAMES: Will 3-D ruin movies we enjoy?

More 3-D: ‘Spider-Man’ reboot, ‘Hugo Cabret,’ ‘Stretch Armstrong’

Feel queasy? 3-D leaves some moviegoers feeling green

JOHN HORN: ‘Toy Story 3’ and ‘Shrek 4’ part of 3-D summer

Cameron versus Zemeckis, the insider scoop

Peter Jackson: Movie fans are fed up with the lack of original ideas

Advertisement
Advertisement