For a number of weeks, Hollywood has been sitting in decision of a last-second choice by Warner Brothers to adapt its 2-D Clash of the Titans into 3-D following its filming was completed.
James Cameron cried blasphemy, Michael Bay said that such rapid alterations resulted in phony 3-D and fanboy bloggers lambasted Warner and insisted on populace to miss it.
It's not a minute issue for Hollywood. With no less than 70films in the 3-D pipeline, including numerous parallel adaptation projects, studios and theater owners are gambling deeply that spectators or viewers will shatter ever more costly 3-D tickets.
Mr. Cameron, whose movie Avatar ignited this passion by earning almost $2.7 billion in worldwide ticket sales, vexed to Deadline. com that Warner is hoping to get the same outcome, when actually they will most likely put efforts in opposition to the implementation of 3-D, since they would be placing out a poorer artifact.
Clash of Titans has been made with an investment of $122 million. In spite of the pessimistic media coverage, predictions state that picture is on its way to sell between $60 million and $70 million in tickets by Monday.












