3D cinema has been around since the early 20th century, but Hollywood brought the technology back In 2007. Many thought it was just a trick to make more money. But then came Avatar, the first must-see movie in 3D.
But since Avatar, 3D cinema has struggled. In 2010, several 3D movies bombed at the box office. And by late 2010, Some people said the technology was dead. Of course, this isn’t the first time Hollywood has struggled with new technology. Although sound was added to movies in the late 1920s, it took audiences time to get used to the new technology. But in the end, sound and color became the standard. James Cameron, director of Avatar, thinks we’re going through the same process with 3D.
Some say cinemas are charging too much for 3D movies. In the US, seeing a 3D movie can cost up to $7.5 more than seeing it in 2D. Also, a recent study at California State University found audiences don’t actually enjoy movies in 3D any more than in 2D. Walter Murch , a famous movie editor, wrote in 2011 that human beings have no ability to process 3D images. Watching a 3D movie confuses our brain and this is why some people get headaches.
But James Cameron disagrees. In fact, he recently predicted that in five years all movies will be in 3D. And there are signs that 3D is fighting back. More 3D movies were put on the market in 2012 than ever before. The Lion King 3D recently made over US $150 million at the box office, and Cameron’s Titanic 3D made even more.
Who knows what the future holds for 3D? Steven Spielberg recently said, ‘Tm hoping 3D gets to a point where people dorft notice it. Because then it just becomes another tool and helps tell a story.”
【小題1】The underlined sentence in Paragraph 2 probably means that in 2010, 3D movies______

A.were not successfulB.became popular
C.developed quicklyD.were of poor quality
【小題2】The example of sound and color is used mainly to show that______.
A.Hollywood tends to absorb what is new
B.3D technology takes time to be accepted
C.Hollywood struggles with new technology
D.high technology helps to make better movies
【小題3】In Walter Murch7S opinion, 3D movies______.
A.bring moviemakers great profits
B.a(chǎn)re more expensive than 2D movies
C.do great harm to people’s health
D.a(chǎn)re unsuitable for people to watch
【小題4】What can we learn from the text?
A.Avatar was the first 3D movie.
B.3D cinema has existed for years.
C.Titanic 3D has made the most money.
D.2012 witnessed the coming of 3D’s time.


【小題1】A
【小題2】B
【小題3】D
【小題4】B 

解析試題分析:本文是議論文。自從《阿凡達(dá)》采用3D影像技術(shù)獲得巨大成功之后,全世界范圍內(nèi)掀起了一股波濤洶涌的3D熱潮。本文就3D時(shí)代是否到了展開(kāi)討論。
【小題1】考查考生對(duì)具體信息的簡(jiǎn)單判斷能力。由本段中關(guān)鍵詞struggled、dead和bombed可判斷該句意為票房失利。故選A。
【小題2】考查考生簡(jiǎn)單推斷的能力。根據(jù)第二段的this isn’t the first time Hollywood has struggled with new technology可知,作者用有聲電影和彩色電影如何發(fā)展成為行業(yè)標(biāo)準(zhǔn)的例子來(lái)說(shuō)明3D電影技術(shù)目前遭遇的尷尬境遇,指出其要被大眾接受還需要時(shí)間。故選B。
【小題3】考查考生對(duì)具體信息的理解情況。根據(jù)第三段that human beings have no ability to process projected 3D images和Watching a 3D movie confuses our brain and this is why some people get headaches.可以判斷在Walter Murch看來(lái),3D影像畫面不適合人類觀看。故選D。
【小題4】考查考生簡(jiǎn)單推斷的能力。3D技術(shù)自從20世紀(jì)初出現(xiàn)以來(lái),一直處于尷尬的境地。多年來(lái),人們一直討論3D電影技術(shù)的發(fā)展前景。文章首句是解題關(guān)鍵。故選B。
考點(diǎn):考查文化藝術(shù)類短文
點(diǎn)評(píng):閱讀議論文時(shí)要注意作者組織本文的結(jié)構(gòu):引題——論據(jù)——論點(diǎn),只有把握了作者的中心論點(diǎn),做題時(shí)才不會(huì)偏離議論中心。題目設(shè)置重點(diǎn)是推理題,通過(guò)文章的重點(diǎn)句子,理解作者的真正意圖。

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2010屆福建省東山二中高三下學(xué)期模擬考試(一) 題型:閱讀理解


3D comes home
Have you had this experience? You are watching a movie. A man is shooting on the screen. The picture is so real that you think he is shooting at you. Or a car is speeding on the screen and at one point you are afraid it will hit you.
Three-dimensional (3D)films use special technology to make pictures seem more real and exciting than two-dimensional ones. Two popular movies in the cinema this year, UP and Ice Age; Dawn of the Dinosaurs both use 3D technology.
So far we can only see 3D films in the cinema with a special screen and projector. But soon, we will be able to watch them in our living rooms. Last month, the Japanese company Sony told reporters that it plans to bring 3D televisions to homes in 2010. The company is also hoping to make other products with 3D, like laptops and PS3.
“      The 3D train is on the track, and we are ready to drive it home,” said Sony President Sir Howard Stringer.
How 3D technology works
Three dimensional movies and TV programs are fun to watch, but do you know how they are made? It is much easier to understand if we do an experiment.
Hold one of your fingers up at arms length and close one eye. Then try closing the other eye. As you switch between open eyes you should see your finger “jumping” left and right against the background.
This happens because our two eyes are about 4 cm away from each other. The separation causes each eye to see the world from a different angle. The brain puts these two views together. What you see becomes three-dimensional.
Three dimensional movies are made using two video cameras at the same time, which creates two different images. When the movie plays in a cinema, two projectors put the two images on the screen. With a pair of 3D glasses, the two images are separated and each image only enters one eye. Your brain puts the two pictures back together, and the pictures on the screen become three-dimensional.
72. What does the sentence “The 3D train is on the track, and we are ready to drive it home” mean?           .
A. They’ve got a train to take 3D films back home
B. They are ready to bring 3D technology to homes
C. They have no more work to do on 3D technology
D. They are not sure about the future of 3D films
73. According to the text, 3D films       .
A. use advanced technology to make special sound effects.
B. are less real than ordinary films, but more exciting.
C. can only be seen in the cinema at the moment.
D. will take the place of 2D films in the near future.
74. From the text, we know that 3D technology        .
A. works in a similar way to how our eyes see things.
B. is too expensive to be used in ordinary homes.
C. uses special video cameras and light effects
D. can be easy to experiment with
75. The passage is mainly about        .
A. how 3D films will develop in the future.    
B. what makes 3D films so enjoyable
C. how 3D technology works and its future
D. what 3D technology needs and its future

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2012-2013學(xué)年山東省聊城市某重點(diǎn)中學(xué)高二第四次模塊檢測(cè)英語(yǔ)試卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解

In spite of the uncertainty of the economy, the movie industry has been stricken by a box-office outburst. Suddenly it seems as if everyone is going to the movies, with ticket sales this year up 17.5 percent, to $1.7 billion.
And it is not just because ticket prices are higher. Attendance has also jumped, by nearly 16 percent. If that pace continues through the year, it would amount to the biggest box-office increase in at least two decades.
Americans, for the moment, just want to hide in a very dark place. People want to forget their troubles, and they want to be with other people. Helping feed the outburst is the mix of movies, which have been more audience-friendly in recent months as the studios have tried to adjust after the discouraging sales of more serious films.
As she stood in line at the 18-screen Bridge theater complex here on Thursday to buy weekend tickets for “Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience,” Angel Hernandez was not thinking much about escaping reality. Instead, Ms. Hernandez, a Los Angeles parking lot attendant and mother of four young girls, was focused on one very specific reality: her wallet.
“Spending hundreds of dollars to take them to Disneyland is ridiculous right now,” she said. “For $60 and some candy money I can still be a good mom and give them a little fun.”
A lot of parents may have been thinking the same thing Friday, as “Jonas Brothers” sold out more than 800 theaters, and was expected to sell a powerful $25 million or more in tickets.
The film industry appears to have had a hand in its recent good luck. Over the last year or two, studios have released movies that are happier, scarier or just less
depressing than what came before. After poor results for a rush of serious dramas built around the Middle East, Hollywood got back to comedies.
【小題1】Which of the following is not a reason for the improvement of the movie industry?

A.A growing number of people are going to the cinema.
B.People are richer with the development of economy.
C.More comedies are made than serious films.
D.People have to pay more to watch a movie.
【小題2】Ms. Hernandez purchased the movie tickets because ________.
A.she tried to escape reality
B.she was a crazy movie fan
C.she was fond of Disneyland
D.she wanted to please her kids
【小題3】According to the text, which of the following number is not used to describe the shooting up of the movie industry?
A.17.5% B.$1.7 billionC.$60D.$25 million
【小題4】The passage is developed mainly by ________.
A.presenting the effect and analyzing the causes
B.following the order of time
C.describing problems and drawing a conclusion
D.making comparison of ideas

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2012-2013學(xué)年?yáng)|北三省四市教研協(xié)作體高三聯(lián)合考試英語(yǔ)試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解

3D cinema has been around since the early 20th century, but Hollywood brought the technology back In 2007. Many thought it was just a trick to make more money. But then came Avatar, the first must-see movie in 3D.

But since Avatar, 3D cinema has struggled. In 2010, several 3D movies bombed at the box office. And by late 2010, Some people said the technology was dead. Of course, this isn’t the first time Hollywood has struggled with new technology. Although sound was added to movies in the late 1920s, it took audiences time to get used to the new technology. But in the end, sound and color became the standard. James Cameron, director of Avatar, thinks we’re going through the same process with 3D.

Some say cinemas are charging too much for 3D movies. In the US, seeing a 3D movie can cost up to $7.5 more than seeing it in 2D. Also, a recent study at California State University found audiences don’t actually enjoy movies in 3D any more than in 2D. Walter Murch , a famous movie editor, wrote in 2011 that human beings have no ability to process 3D images. Watching a 3D movie confuses our brain and this is why some people get headaches.

But James Cameron disagrees. In fact, he recently predicted that in five years all movies will be in 3D. And there are signs that 3D is fighting back. More 3D movies were put on the market in 2012 than ever before. The Lion King 3D recently made over US $150 million at the box office, and Cameron’s Titanic 3D made even more.

Who knows what the future holds for 3D? Steven Spielberg recently said, ‘Tm hoping 3D gets to a point where people dorft notice it. Because then it just becomes another tool and helps tell a story.”

1.The underlined sentence in Paragraph 2 probably means that in 2010, 3D movies______

A.were not successful                     B.became popular

C.developed quickly                       D.were of poor quality

2.The example of sound and color is used mainly to show that______.

A.Hollywood tends to absorb what is new

B.3D technology takes time to be accepted

C.Hollywood struggles with new technology

D.high technology helps to make better movies

3.In Walter Murch7S opinion, 3D movies______.

A.bring moviemakers great profits

B.a(chǎn)re more expensive than 2D movies

C.do great harm to people’s health

D.a(chǎn)re unsuitable for people to watch

4.What can we learn from the text?

A.Avatar was the first 3D movie.

B.3D cinema has existed for years.

C.Titanic 3D has made the most money.

D.2012 witnessed the coming of 3D’s time.

 

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:20102011學(xué)年度吉林長(zhǎng)春市高二下學(xué)期期初考試英語(yǔ)卷 題型:閱讀理解

In spite of the uncertainty of the economy, the movie industry has been stricken by a box-office outburst. Suddenly it seems as if everyone is going to the movies, with ticket sales this year up 17.5 percent, to $1.7 billion.

And it is not just because ticket prices are higher. Attendance has also jumped, by nearly 16 percent. If that pace continues through the year, it would amount to the biggest box-office increase in at least two decades.

Americans, for the moment, just want to hide in a very dark place. People want to forget their troubles, and they want to be with other people. Helping feed the outburst is the mix of movies, which have been more audience-friendly in recent months as the studios have tried to adjust after the discouraging sales of more serious films.

As she stood in line at the 18-screen Bridge theater complex here on Thursday to buy weekend tickets for “Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience,” Angel Hernandez was not thinking much about escaping reality. Instead, Ms. Hernandez, a Los Angeles parking lot attendant and mother of four young girls, was focused on one very specific reality: her wallet.

“Spending hundreds of dollars to take them to Disneyland is ridiculous right now,” she said. “For $60 and some candy money I can still be a good mom and give them a little fun.”

A lot of parents may have been thinking the same thing Friday, as “Jonas Brothers” sold out more than 800 theaters, and was expected to sell a powerful $25 million or more in tickets.

The film industry appears to have had a hand in its recent good luck. Over the last year or two, studios have released movies that are happier, scarier or just less

depressing than what came before. After poor results for a rush of serious dramas built around the Middle East, Hollywood got back to comedies.

1.Which of the following is not a reason for the improvement of the movie industry?

A.A growing number of people are going to the cinema.

B.People are richer with the development of economy.

C.More comedies are made than serious films.

D.People have to pay more to watch a movie.

2.Ms. Hernandez purchased the movie tickets because ________.

A.she tried to escape reality

B.she was a crazy movie fan

C.she was fond of Disneyland

D.she wanted to please her kids

3..According to the text, which of the following number is not used to describe the shooting up of the movie industry?

A.17.5%

B.$1.7 billion

C.$60

D.$25 million

4.The passage is developed mainly by ________.

A.presenting the effect and analyzing the causes

B.following the order of time

C.describing problems and drawing a conclusion

D.making comparison of ideas

 

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