
But overall, it's a pretty blurred picture from start to finish. Only a couple of scenes here and there have aspects that look fully 2D, though that's more than likely to anchor the picture down. With Disney's latest 3D spectacular, the blurring is fairly present in all aspects of the film. That's because the blur of the image is supposed to indicate how much the image has been manipulated into a 3D image. If you were to lift up your glasses during a 3D showing of Ralph Breaks The Internet, you would notice that the image is blurred to a certain degree. In the case of the Ralph Breaks The Internet showing used for this evaluation, the picture was rather dimmed, which wreaks havoc on even the brightest of images.

As such, depending on how your theater maintains their projector and equipment between 2D and 3D showings, your mileage may vary on how bright the picture comes out. As per usual with the world of grey and black glasses, there's a bit of a dimming factor that's added to the picture you're watching in the theater. If you've been on the 3D hype train for Ralph Breaks The Internet, it's unfortunately time to pump those brakes.

But more impressively, the film's depth of picture is worthy of the internet, as there's a lot of space in the background for action to take place. Ralph Breaks The Internet exceeds on both fronts, as characters are separated from objects and the environments they inhabit with a healthy degree of spatial reasoning. You can see how good a film's 3D depth perception is, not only in how deep the background feels, but also how well the characters are spaced out from those backgrounds, as well as each other.
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An equally hard aspect to crack when it comes to the proper 3D conversion is, of course, the sense of depth to the picture you're watching.
