Tron Legacy [Blu-ray] [Region Free]
G**U
Tron- LEGACY!
A Great movie and great watch..
P**R
The legacy of Tron
Once upon a time....Long, long ago....I was a teenager.That was in a time now long forgotten.A time dimly remembered in myth and legend.And referred to only as: The 1980's.If you were a teenager at the start of the 1980's [although this was mostly the male ones] you loved visiting amusement arcades and shovelling ten pence piece after ten pence piece into the latest console [or coin op as we also called them] game. You thought computers were the most amazing things ever and that they would change the world.And you went to see the original Tron film at the cinema because it promised utterly amazing and mind blowing visuals and stunning special effects.Well, they pretty much were by the standard of the time.Nobody prepared you to consider what the script might be like.Nevertheless, Tron has a cult following. Thanks to that, a belated sequel has finally appeared. Presumably also thanks to that it's a sequel rather than another remake of a 1980's movie. So thanks to that indeed.There is enough exposition for those who haven't seen the original to get into it, but you're probably better off seeing the original first, in order to get more out of the story.Tron Legacy opens with Kevin Flynn, hero of the original, having made good via trading in on the story of what happened there. Something that has become a favourite bedtime story for his young son Sam. Who has a roomfull of all the Tron posters and merchandise that has made his dad rich. And look very familiar to fans of the original. Which is a nice touch.Jeff Bridges plays Kevin again. And the first clear look we get at him shows that he still looks the same as he did back then. Thanks of course to the wonders of digital technology. This first shot does grab the attention.Does Tron finally have the visuals we all dreamed of back then?But Kevin vanishes. Sam grows up. And finds himself in a world that's all too familiar. A world where mega corporations rule the computing industry and dream only of their profit margins. A world of videos of animals doing cute and/or funny things being internet sensations. And where the pioneers of the 1980's are now old men marginalised in the boardrooms of the companies they helped to create. [A nice performance from Bruce Boxleitner, returning to his role of Alan from the original.]Sam's trying to do something about this, but then a mysterious message sends him to a long forgotten video games arcade. And beyond. Into the world he'd only ever been told about. A world that has become as dark as the real one. Kevin Flynn's bold attempt to change things has been corrupted. And the fight to survive is on...Visually this does do so much that original couldn't. But of course the dvd doesn't have 3d big screen effects. Nevertheless whilst the light cycle and disc throwing battles do look good, the colour scheme of the whole thing isn't the brightest. Which does fit the storyline. But it means it's not quite as stunning as you might have expected. Rather like the original.The effect of digitising Jeff Bridges to make him look younger comes into play throughout, but whilst it does work fine his character in the bulk of the film wears a black body suit with no neckline. And thus it takes a lot of getting used to as it rather looks as if they've just superimposed film of his younger self onto another actor.A movie of chases and escapes and battling villainy and treachery with the occasional action set piece ensues.It does all this quite well.But where it succeeds is in it's resonance. Because it will strike a chord with those teenagers of the early 1980's. Those who've seen the computing future they dreamed of not quite turn out to be what they expected. We can, like the villain of the piece here, cling to the past, or we can learn from our experiences. As Kevin Flynn does.So for that reason, this is quite a successful piece of work. Jeff Bridges aquits himself very well in a role that requires him to do quite a lot of different things. And he gets able support from Olivia Wilde as a denizen of the computer world, who has a couple of lovely little scenes where she shows how desperate she is to know more of the real world.Garrett Hedlund plays the grown up Sam in a role that doesn't really stretch him too much. But watch for Michael Sheen in a supporting role having the most fun you might expect he's ever had on a movie.So it's still not quite the visual spectacular it could be, but the thought provoking parts of the script will make this a good experience for those of the right age.The disc has the following language and subtitle options:Languages: English, Spanish, Hindi.Subtitles: English, Spanish, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Finnish, Icelandic, Portugese.English audio description.It begins with several trailers and adverts that you can skip via hitting the next button on the dvd remote.There are more adverts in the sneak peeks section of the extras.But there aren't many more extras beyond that:A one minute long trailer for a forthcoming animated series called Tron Uprising.A four minute long advert for 3d hd dvd, featuring two characters from the Lion King.Plus two eleven minute long features:Visualising Tron: All about the genesis and production of this movie.Installing the cast: All about the cast members and their characters.Both are pretty brief but perhaps because of that do manage to be well paced and pack some interesting information in.
P**L
Clu Legacy
Since Tron isn't really in this film and Clu has a lot more screen time than Tron, it should be called "Clu Legacy" (though wasn't Clu permanently derezzed in the first film?!). The scanning laser does not make 3D digital copies of the real world thing it scans but rather physically changes the object into a virtual object; that's how our hero enters the 'game grid' to play lightcycles and doesn't need an omni-directional pad, haptic suit and VR headset to see and interact with the virtual digital environment. Okay so, if the 'game grid' was offline since the mid-1980's until Flynn's -retconned- son, Sam, turned it back on in 2010 when he entered Flynn's Arcade, then shouldn't the grid be exactly the same looking as it was in the first film? I mean, Windows XP on my old PC doesn't evolve into Windows 11 while my desktop is switched off in the closet over the years, right? But, obviously, we're not dealing with logical consistency or continuity or any of that silly stuff here. Tron Legacy looks stylish, shiny, glassy and beautifully illuminated with all new flexi-striplights. However, the story does the same thing to the heroic character of Kevin Flynn as The Last Jedi did to Luke Skywalker, that is, completely removes his heroic nature and demeans all that he had fought for in the previous film and turns him into a useless, taciturn, outcast loner. Tron Legacy is less of a Tron sequel and more of a rebooted Tron mixed with Lawnmower Man 2 (yeah, the awful one). They could've gone a bit further with the story and risked making Kevin Flynn the villain in this piece and have his son, Sam, enter the grid to save him from himself (something like Luke did for his father in Return of the Jedi). But they didn't or weren't brave enough as script writers, instead they gave us the worse 'The Last Jedi stinkpile' of a sequel.
M**N
A visual treat.
As someone who is old enough to remember TRON. This sequel has upped the ante in this visually spectacular yarn. No need for story just enjoy.
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