* * * * *
“Tron Legacy”
Jeff [1], Bunny and I went to see “Tron Legacy [2],” the sequel to Disney
[3]'s 1982 film “Tron [4].
I'll say this right now—the film is just as cheesy as the original, but I'm
still glad I saw it in the theater. The plot is predictable—Kevin Flynn (Jeff
Bridges [5]) makes an incredible discovery in the computer he helped to
liberate (in “Tron”) and rebuilt, but one of his helper programs—the very one
he wrote, CLU (Codified Likeness Utility), staged a coup, killed TRON (TRace
ON) (the program written by Kevin's friend Alan Bradley (Bruce Boxleitner
[6]) that helped Flynn in the original movie) and trapped Flynn in the
computer. Twenty years later, Flynn's son Sam (Garrett Hedlund [7]) gets a
message from his father and when he goes to investigate, gets sucked into the
computer and with the help of his father and another program, Quorra (Olivia
Wilde [8]) leads yet another revolution to free the computer for the users.
The real draw for this movie (and much like the original) is in the computer
imagery and music. The visuals are absolutely stunning and the re-imaging of
the iconic … um … icons, from Tron are beautiful, and that may prove to be
its ultimate downfall in time. You see, in “Tron,” it was obvious that the
animations were done via computer—they're pretty much the iconic look for
“computer graphics” and strangely enough, for being almost thirty years old,
stand up incredibly well. The imagery for “Tron Legacy” though, is too
realistic (exhaust vents on the Recognizers? Really?) and solid looking.
Gorgeous, yes, but this is meant to exist inside a computer; does it really
need to look … well … realistic?
But on this quibble, time will tell.
Disney also had a tough task in making Jeff Bridges look young (for the
opening scenes of the film, and a few flashbacks), and here, I think they
failed overall, as the younger Kevin Flynn tended to fall right inside the
Uncanny Valley [9]. As CLU it would make sense that his likeness would fall
into the Uncanny Valley, but given that none of the other “computer programs”
fell there, it just made the “young” Jeff Bridges really disturbing to look
at, unlike, say, Olivia Wilde or Beau Garrett, who, I must say, looked
absolutely stunning in their Tron costumes [10].
For a fan of Tron, it's worth seeing. To see stunning visuals, it's worth
seeing. For an incredible story and acting … um … not so much. Still a fun
film, though.
[1]
http://spinthecat.blogspot.com/
[2]
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1104001/
[3]
http://www.disney.com/
[4]
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084827/
[5]
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000313/
[6]
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000310/
[7]
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1330560/
[8]
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1312575/
[9]
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/UncannyValley
[10]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2010/12/18/tron_babes.jpg
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