Avatar sequel crashes movie theatre equipment in Japan

    • The second Avatar film adopts many of the latest visual technologies, including a high frame-rate 3D format that appears to have fallen prey to Japan’s laggard cinema industry.
    • The second Avatar film adopts many of the latest visual technologies, including a high frame-rate 3D format that appears to have fallen prey to Japan’s laggard cinema industry. PHOTO: THE WALT DISNEY CO
    Published Wed, Dec 21, 2022 · 06:56 PM

    WALT Disney’s Avatar: The Way of Water crashed screening equipment in some theatres across Japan, running into technical difficulties during its critical opening weekend in the country.

    Audiences who went to see the James Cameron sequel took to social media to report abrupt cancellations and staff apologising about machine troubles while issuing refunds. At least one theatre lowered the frame rate of the film by half in order to be able to screen it.

    The second Avatar film, one of the most expensive productions in Hollywood history, adopts many of the latest visual technologies, including a high-frame-rate 3D format that requires a great deal of information processed quickly. It appears to have fallen prey to Japan’s cinema industry being slow to upgrade to the most up-to-date equipment.

    United Cinemas, a member of the Lawson group, and Toho declined to comment on the issue. Some of their screens were mentioned by fans who had been turned away from their booked Avatar screenings. Tokyu Corp, another theatre chain operator in the country, and Disney, the movie’s distributor, did not return calls seeking comment.

    The specific cause of the technical issues remains unclear. However, one theatre in Nagoya worked around its hurdles by stepping down from the specified 48 frames per second (fps) to the traditional cinematic 24 fps.

    These challenges come at the worst time for the Cameron film, which underwhelmed some estimates with its opening weekend box office haul and now faces a disrupted holiday season in a country of avid moviegoers. That may further weigh on Disney’s share price, which has fallen 45 per cent this year. BLOOMBERG

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