How VR Technology Benefits Filmmakers?

Media Entertainment Tech Outlook | Friday, November 08, 2019

Digital-age filmmakers are using VR technologies to improve cinematic experiences for their audiences.

FREMONT, CA: In recent years, Virtual Reality (VR) has brought tremendous changes in the ways of filmmaking. To understand how VR technology impacts the filmmaking sector, highlighting the current benefits of technology is sufficient. Today, VR technology is majorly used to develop video games, TV shows, and many other applications beyond entertainment. VR enables an immersive experience for the audience and makes them feel more like protagonists, immersed in the landscape, and the action.

Producing VR-based movies for the cinema is much easier when compared with traditional film making. VR technology offers high-end features that make the viewing experience better by upgrading the filmmaking ways and providing more opportunities to the filmmakers to experiment.

While VR experiences are majorly accessible through short films, the mainstream filmmakers are yet to utilize the brilliant technology in full scale. However, for VR film exhibition in the conventional home video sense, there is also not much of a development in the present market. Therefore, having a VR film for a show will limit only for theatre viewing, affecting market sales.

Film festivals and exhibitions offer VR filmmakers opportunities that they could not find otherwise. More than anything else, film festivals demonstrate the film as an essential form of art rather than a purely commercial product to sell. The sophisticated representation offered by the film festivals motivates the filmmakers to validate their VR-based film art in the same exhibition or platform. The necessity for the substantial promotion of films in festivals is one of the primary reasons for VR adoption by filmmakers.

It is crucial to remember that technological innovation can bring extraordinary outcomes in the cinema industry. Keeping audiences engaged requires good content. For VR to thrive, filmmakers need to take it seriously, shaping critically and commercially viable movies that will keep viewers eager for more.