"It is bleeding edge new," says Quinlan Orear, associate chair of film and television at Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia.
"This technology is so incredibly important because this is where the industry is going."
Orear is referring to SCAD's new XR stage, an 18-foot-high, 40-foot-wide LED stage made up of almost 600 LED panels that's expected to change the way we watch movies and TV shows in the not-too-distant future, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports.
SCAD is the only university in the world with two such large LED volumes, and students are already using them to create commercials, films, and experimental VR projects.
TheXR stage uses "extended reality technology that combines live-action performance on stage and real-time environments," according to a SCAD press release.
The technology automatically shifts as the camera moves.
"We can step deeper and deeper into infinity, as long as our engineers design it that way," Orear says.
"And everything here is being rendered in real-time, meaning it's responding as our camera is moving."
The technology was developed for movies like The Mandalorian, Thor: Love and Thunder, and TV shows like The Batman and Thor: Love
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