Well, that’s not exactly true. The fact that it’s completely in 3-D will, no doubt, play a big part in its marketing. It will also impress those film-goers who think any technological wizardry can compensate for a movie’s many shortcomings. And boy, does Sanctum have shortcomings: from wretched dialogue to pedestrian performances to a story that is so thin it could snap. The plot can be summed up very simply: a group of explorers in Papua New Guinea get trapped in a flooded cave, most of them die but not before a son bonds with the father that he barely knows. That’s it, except for the 3-D which will likely distract some folks from noticing any of the film’s major flaws. All it did for me is annoy me. It also caused me to wonder, once again, why we even need to have 3-D? It really doesn’t add any flavour or interest to most movies; films, if they’re good or great, don’t need these kinds of tricks to work. (Harlan Ellison, one of my favourite writers, and a great ranter, would likely describe the uselessness of 3-D as being akin to having an extra set of elbows.) The only difference that I can see between 3-D from the '50s, when the studios at least had the excuse of needing to offer something that upstart television could not, to today’s version, when the movies can do so many impressive things with special effects besides 3-D, is that it is executed better and the glasses are sturdier and more comfortable. Otherwise there’s no real point to this so-called innovation.
And since 3-D hasn’t quite been worked out for DVD play, it won’t even help Sanctum when it leaves our screens (not too soon for me) and mercifully disappears into the video store ether. Never, if we're lucky, to be heard from again. Meanwhile, save your shekels and spend the inflated prices asked for 3-D movies on a good CD, or book, or DVD rental(s) instead. There, I’ve saved you $15 bucks. You can thank me later.
– Shlomo Schwartzberg is a film critic, teacher and arts journalist based in Toronto . Beginning Friday, he will be teaching a course on film genre this winter at Ryerson University 's LIFE Institute. For more information go to http://www.ryerson.ca/~lifeinst/pages/courses
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