Drop in your favourite memories — from a quick snap to a full year of moments — and watch them open one day at a time.
Record a short video, pick a GIF from Giphy, or paste a YouTube link. Up to 30 seconds of moving content per door.
Add a written note to each photo or video — a song lyric, an inside joke, a reason you love them.
Share the finished calendar by WhatsApp, iMessage, email, or any other channel. The recipient doesn't need an account.
Classic vintage doors with hand-set numerals or a modern 2023 design with festive illustrations.
Free with a short rewarded ad before each door, or a one-time in-app purchase to remove ads entirely for the recipient.
Tap "+", pick a recipient name and a design, choose a cover photo. Done in 30 seconds.
Tap any of the 24 doors and add a photo, video, GIF, YouTube link or message — in any order.
Tap "Send", confirm your name, and share the link. The recipient opens one door per day from December 1st.
So, if you find that old DVD in a bargain bin, or you dig out the combo pack from your parents' basement, grab the glasses. Ignore the color bleed. Embrace the ghosting. And when the high-five comes flying out of the screen at 60fps, do yourself a favor: turn your head.
While modern audiences are accustomed to polarized 3D glasses in theaters and high-tech VR headsets, there remains a specific, gritty charm to the home video experience of Jackass 3D using the format. This article explores the unique intersection of crude humor and stereoscopic technology, analyzing why the red-and-cyan glasses became the perfect vessel for the Jackass crew’s unique brand of chaos. Jackass 3d anaglyph -red cyan-
Let’s be honest: the anaglyph version of Jackass 3D looks terrible. And that is precisely why it works for this franchise. So, if you find that old DVD in
Jackass 3D (2010) was the first major theatrical stunt film to utilize 3D technology, famously featuring an opening and closing sequence where the cast was pelted with various objects in high-definition slow motion. While it was originally filmed for professional and IMAX 3D theaters, home viewers often experienced it through anaglyph 3D . And when the high-five comes flying out of
Jackass is about low-rent solutions to high-impact problems. Using a scratched, red-and-cyan DVD to watch Johnny Knoxville get launched by a bull isn't a bug; it's a feature. It is the most punk rock, DIY way to watch a $20 million movie.
To make it accessible to everyone with a standard DVD player, they included a classic anaglyph (two-color) version of the film. The Colors: While the query mentions red-cyan, the official Jackass 3D home release actually used Pink and Green (magenta and yellow-green)