Only if the TV is playing the old "red/blue" film in all its original glory.
(Since this makes it blurry for most people, they seldom do.)
Maybe. There are 2 kinds of 3D televisions: active 3D and passive 3D. The active sets use glasses with special shutters that are synchronized to the TV. These will not work in a movie theatre. The passive sets use polarized light, which is the same system that is used in movie theatres, but your TV may use a different polarization scheme than the movie, so you would (for example) have to hold your head at a 45-degree angle to see the movie in 3D.
For any passive 3D television, the 3D glasses from movie theaters will work.
Yes.
I would assume they use the same glasses over and over again, since they usually make an attempt to get them back from you after the movie is over. Either there's a basket outside the theatre to put the glasses in, or they have someone standing there with the basket, who politely asks you to give them back. Surely some people keep them -- either deliberately or by accident -- so they will have to add some new ones to the bunch they hand out before the show. But for the most part I think they keep reusing the same glasses.
3D movie glasses can be obtained in wholesale quantities from DHGate. Note that 3D movie theaters use circular polarization to produce the 3D effect, which is totally different from the shutter systems domestic 3D TVs use. Movie theater 3D glasses will not work with a 3D TV - neither will the make effective or safe sunglasses.
Yes,you can if they are specialy made.
No. Firework glasses use diffraction to make light from the fireworks look different. 3D glasses use polarization to block either vertical or horizontal light coming through the lenses deending on which lense you look through.
No just movie tix u can try at concessions if they will accept card.
depends if the theatres glasses are the red and blue ones or the grey ones, and if your tv is red and blue or grey.
Ernest Calabro The first use of 3D glasses was in 1922 for the movie "Power of Love".
The first movie to use sound dialog is The Jazz Singer (original version from 1927).
Good question I'd like to know the answer.