Grammy‑winning singer‑songwriter Billie Eilish told 23,500 fans at Manchester’s Co‑op Live arena that a 3‑D film collaboration with director James Cameron is underway, pointing out “more cameras than usual” before promising “something very, very special” that will surround viewers in three dimensions.
She added that Cameron was in the audience and that footage from her four‑night stint in the city will anchor the project, whose final format she declined to specify. The revelation arrived midway through Eilish’s global “Hit Me Hard and Soft” tour, which has sold out Europe’s largest indoor venues while testing a camera array developed by Cameron’s Lightstorm Entertainment.
Industry insiders describe the venture as a concert feature employing high‑frame‑rate stereography similar to the techniques used on the Avatar sequels, with Cameron’s team capturing vantage points impossible in traditional broadcasts.
Eilish’s camp has not confirmed distribution plans, but IMAX executives have quietly signalled interest in an event‑cinema rollout timed to coincide with the tour’s U.S. leg this autumn. Fans online have contrasted the secrecy with Eilish’s 2021 Disney+ concert film Happier Than Ever: A Love Letter to Los Angeles, noting that project was announced months ahead of release whereas the Manchester shoot began without advance publicity.
For Cameron the undertaking marks a return to live‑music experiments he first pursued with Interscope Records in 2007, when he prototyped multi‑camera rigs for immersive stage experiences that never reached wide theatrical release. At Co‑op Live, ushers distributed disclaimers about “prolonged filming in stereoscopic formats,” and a robotic crane system traced arcs above the mosh pit—equipment observers say matches Lightstorm’s latest compact sensor packages.
Music‑film scholars argue the pairing could push large‑scale concert movies beyond flat‑screen presentation, while some fans on social media questioned whether 3‑D adds artistic value or simply inflates ticket prices.
In Manchester, skepticism was muted by excitement: when Eilish mentioned Cameron’s name, the roar briefly overwhelmed her microphone feed, a moment that will likely appear in whatever the final cut becomes. Further details are expected once filming concludes at Tuesday’s show, though neither Interscope nor Lightstorm would comment on post‑production timelines.





















































