
-
Charlotte beats Miami 3-0 as MLS win streak hits nine
-
Jepchirchir wins marathon thriller, heartbreak for Ingebrigtsen
-
Duplantis, Warholm and strong 100m hurdles headline Day 3 of Tokyo worlds
-
'Where's that spine?': All Blacks slammed after record loss
-
Lab-grown diamonds robbing southern Africa of riches
-
Australia to spend US$8 bn on nuclear sub shipyard facility
-
Wallabies 'dominated by disappointment' as All Blacks loom
-
Rubio to begin Israel visit in aftermath of Qatar strike
-
US Fed poised for first rate cut of 2025 as political tension mounts
-
Immigration raids sapping business at Texas eateries
-
Griffin maintains PGA Procore lead with Koivun, Scheffler chasing
-
'Adolescence' and 'The Studio' tipped to win big at TV's Emmys
-
Kenya's Jepchirchir outsprints Assefa for world marathon gold
-
Injury-hit Ingebrigtsen fails to advance in world 1,500m
-
Brewers become first club to clinch MLB playoff berth
-
Monaco squeeze past 10-man Auxerre to climb to third
-
Former Aspiration exec denies Leonard had 'no-show' deal
-
IndyCar drops bid for '26 Mexico race due to World Cup impact
-
Ogier makes a splash at Rally of Chile
-
Arsenal spoil Ange return, Chelsea held by Brentford
-
Chelsea blow chance to top Premier League at Brentford
-
Atletico beat Villarreal for first Liga win
-
Last-gasp Juve beat Inter to keep pace with leaders Napoli
-
England's Hull leads Jeeno by one at LPGA Queen City event
-
Clashes with police after up to 150,000 gather at far-right UK rally
-
Romania, Poland, scramble aircraft as drones strike Ukraine
-
Netanayhu says killing Hamas leaders is route to ending Gaza war
-
New Zealand and Canada to face off in Women's Rugby World Cup semi-final
-
France's new PM courts the left a day after ratings downgrade
-
Last-gasp Juve beat Inter to maintain perfect Serie A start
-
Kane hits brace as Bayern thump Hamburg again
-
Arsenal spoil Ange return, Spurs win at West Ham
-
Sri Lanka cruise to six-wicket win over Bangladesh in Asia Cup T20
-
Spurs beat woeful West Ham to pile pressure on Potter
-
Rubio says Qatar strike 'not going to change' US-Israel ties
-
Toulouse turn on Top 14 power despite sub-par performance
-
Canada cruise past Australia into semi-finals of Women's Rugby World Cup
-
Vienna wins on home turf as it hosts first tram driver world cup
-
Who is Tyler Robinson, alleged killer of Charlie Kirk?
-
London police arrest nine after clashes at 110,000-strong far-right rally
-
Mbappe shines as 10-man Real Madrid defeat Real Sociedad
-
Kenyan officials, athletes call for fast action on doping
-
Arsenal spoil Ange return, Woltemade earns Newcastle win
-
Guirassy extends streak as Dortmund cruise past 10-man Heidenheim
-
Vingegaard touching Vuelta glory with stage 20 triumph as protests continue
-
'World's fastest anime fan' Lyles in element at Tokyo worlds
-
De Minaur's Australia trail as Germany, Argentina into Davis Cup finals
-
Airstrikes, drones, tariffs: being US friend not what it used to be
-
Cyclists swerve protest group in road during Vuelta stage 20
-
A Tokyo full house revels in Chebet and sprinters at world athletics champs

'The Matrix is everywhere': cinema bets on immersion
In a Los Angeles theater, a trench coat-wearing Neo bends backwards to dodge bullets that spiral over the viewer's head, as the sound of gunfire erupts from everywhere.
This new immersive experience is designed to be a red pill moment that will get film fans off their couches at a time when the movie industry is desperate to bring back audiences.
Cosm, which has venues in Los Angeles and Dallas, is launching its dome-style screen and 3D sets in June with a "shared reality" version of "The Matrix," the cult 1999 film starring Keanu Reeves as a man who suddenly learns his world is a fiction.
"We believe the future will be more immersive and more experiential," said Cosm president Jeb Terry at a recent preview screening.
"It's trying to create an additive, a new experience, ideally non-cannibalistic, so that the industry can continue to thrive across all formats."
Cinema audiences were already dwindling when the Covid-19 pandemic broke out, shuttering theaters at a time when streaming was exploding.
With ever bigger and better TVs available for the home, the challenge for theater owners is to offer something that movie buffs cannot get in their living room.
Prestige projects like Tom Cruise's "Mission: Impossible -- The Final Reckoning" or Christopher Nolan's Oscar-winning "Oppenheimer" increasingly opt for the huge screens and superior film quality of IMAX.
But Cosm and other projects like it want to go one step further, collaborating with designers who have worked with Cirque du Soleil to create an environment in which the viewer feels like they are inside the film.
For filmmakers, it's all about how you place the cameras and where you capture the sound, said Jay Rinsky, founder of Little Cinema, a creative studio specializing in immersive experiences.
"We create sets like the Parisian opera, let the movie be the singer, follow the tone, highlight the emotions... through light, through production design, through 3D environments," he said.
The approach, he said, felt particularly well suited to "The Matrix," which he called "a masterpiece of cinema, but done as a rectangle."
For the uninitiated: Reeves's Neo is a computer hacker who starts poking around in a life that doesn't quite seem to fit.
A mysterious Laurence Fishburne offers him a blue pill that will leave him where he is, or a red pill that will show him he is a slave whose body is being farmed by AI machines while his conscious lives in a computer simulation.
There follows much gunfire, lots of martial arts and some mysticism, along with a romance between Neo and Trinity, played by the leather-clad Carrie-Anne Moss.
"The Matrix" in shared reality kicks off with a choice of cocktails -- blue or red, of course -- which are consumed as the audience sits surrounded by high-definition screens.
Shifting perspectives place the viewer inside Neo's office cubicle, or seemingly in peril.
"They're sometimes inside the character's head," said Rinsky. "The world changes as you look up and down for trucks coming at you."
The result impressed those who were at the preview screening.
"It just did feel like an experience," influencer Vince Rossi told AFP. "It felt like you're at a theme park for a movie almost."
P.Keller--VB