7/15/2012

Technology Of Film

By Simon Patel


Video cassettes and their players are now obsolete. This is because better technology has slowly but surely taken its place. It is now common to see households with DVD or Blu-ray players and DVDs or Blu-ray discs; it is no longer usual to find video cassettes in a person's home, and even rarer to find a video player in a person's home.

Technology for films and filming is constantly being bettered; the amount of technology films can now employ is almost unimaginable. And there is new technology always being made, ready to make the next film bigger and better. Technological advancements have seen the media world be changed from the very core, breaking the rules and creating new ones to constantly better its self.

Watching films at home has always been a popular option. It is easier most of the time to watch films at home, than take trips to the cinema. It is also a lot less expensive, and in the world where money is tight, that is a valuable commodity. The technology of film makes a home experience almost like going to the cinema.

A lot of old films are being constantly digitally remastered, bettered, given special features, shown new technologies, and then being written on to a DVD. This means that the films we loved as children are now ready for us to enjoy as adult, with extra features that the younger us never once had the wonderful fortune to ever experience or even enjoy.

Films are a thing that brings people together; liking the same film as someone can be a way to start a conversation, and even form a friendship. First dates to the cinemas gives you something to talk about. And relaxing over a favourite film with the family can help you all forget your previous squabbles, and learn to get along once again.




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