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Ah well, it was a lovely dream....



‘Star Wars’ to bow on low-tech film



March 28 -- No one in the movie business has pushed harder for digital technology than George Lucas and his Lucasfilm Ltd. His coming “Star Wars: Episode II-Attack of the Clones” is the highest-profile film ever created with digital cameras, and it incorporates cutting-edge computer-generated imagery in every shot.



BUT WHEN THE FILM rolls out to theaters on May 16, all that digital wizardry will be transferred to low-tech rolls of celluloid that run through old-fashioned film projectors. Indeed, after years of hype surrounding the high-tech future of motion pictures, there still are only 27 U.S. theaters where moviegoers can see a film that’s projected digitally, though industry officials say there may be more digital screens in operation by May.
Lucas had originally planned on releasing Episode 2 to digital theatres first, film second. Obviously plans have changed. The film industry keeps getting held back by the same, er, people who cry desperately for Hollins's horribly misnamed Consumer Broadband and Digital Television Promotion Act, (formerly the Security Systems Standards and Certification Act). No one wants to risk anything toward anything new.



Ah well....

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