Part of the TRON press event included an advance screening of TRON: Legacy. 
We’ve been under embargo not to review the movie, but someone broke the 
embargo, so we are no longer going to keep it secret.

If you do not like movie spoilers, do not click to read more and do not read 
on, because I’m going to tell you what I think about the movie and I’m going to 
include some information about it that you might not want to know. I’m not 
going to give away major plots, because I hate that, but I’m going to go into 
some of my thoughts on the movie. If you are curious about seeing TRON and 
don’t mind a tidbit of information, read on.

When I saw TRON the first time as a child it opened up my mind to amazing 
possibilities. The story around Kevin Flynn was ok, but the ideas around being 
transported to a virtual world where programs were personified by human 
representations are what really stuck with me. I liked to believe that one day 
this would be possible. I could have an avatar and I could meet people on the 
“grid”. In some ways we can do this now through MMORPGs etc., but we’re still 
aware of our real world surroundings. We can’t truly get lost yet. We can’t 
feel, smell and taste virtual things. Maybe someday.

TRON held a different place in my heart during different periods of my life. As 
a child, it was just a simple and beautiful thing, but as an adult, I dove 
deeper into the technology that made it all possible. What TRON achieved in 
1982 was ground breaking. From what I understand, it was the first movie to 
incorporate live action with CGI and hand drawn animation. The results were 
breath taking. I know you look back at it now and maybe you don’t see it, but 
you have to somehow use a mental wayback machine to put yourself in the early 
80s and imagine it. The animations were rendered on the only PDP-10 in the area 
using 2MB of RAM.

As a young adult, I played TRON at parties with the volume off. We’d watch it 
in the background and revel at its beauty. When the volume was on, we laughed 
at the witty and inaccurate technical jokes, but they were endearing. My 
favorite character was “bit” who only spoke in binary. Yes and No.

Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes… NO NO NO NO NO! Yes.

When IMDB launched, I immediately looked up TRON and saw – “In production TRON 
2.0, release date TBD”. I waited and waited. I heard the production was 
canceled, restarted, canceled, restarted, etc. As technology accelerated and 
movies like the Matrix & Avatar appeared, it made me hopeful for what they 
could create with a new TRON.

I also love the original Star Wars. When I found out they were making Episode 
1, I had extremely mixed feelings. Unlike TRON, I’m not sure Star Wars gets 
better with improved technology. Part of what made Star Wars so special were 
the models and limitations of the time. I camped out all night with a friend 
and we played chess while we waited to see the new Star Wars. I was so 
disappointed. Jar Jar ruined quite a bit of it for me, but really, if I had to 
be honest, it wasn’t special anymore. Something was lost. I was too young to 
realize it then, but those movies were not intended for me. They were intended 
for a whole new audience and a whole new generation of Star Wars fans that had 
just recently been born. I wasn’t going to relive my childhood through that 
movie and I had to move on.

So, really, the Matrix is the sequel to TRON in my mind. That’s where you’d 
take a concept like TRON to a whole new level for adults. The key word being 
adult. The new TRON, like Star Wars, is for a whole new generation. It is a 
stand alone movie that needs to be judged on its own.

It is a Frankenstein story, where the artist creates a world that is meant to 
be perfect, but everything goes wrong. The cost is the real and tangible 
relationship with the outside world.  It is also a story about the ethics 
around artificial intelligence. If the original TRON inspired me the way it 
did, I wonder what our children will take away from this. Maybe they’ll get the 
message.

So, if the Matrix, Snowcrash, Diamond Age and Avatar are for adults. TRON is 
the movie for children. It is the introduction to the complex idea of existing 
in a virtual world by transporting your brain and identity into an electronic 
form. Think of it as a Madeleine L’ engle book. If you read a Wrinkle In Time 
as a child, it was an introduction to quantum physics. This is what TRON is. It 
is a primer for more complex thoughts that require more literature and other 
movies.

The new TRON is absolutely beautiful. The Cirque Du Soliel of movies. You don’t 
go for the plot at Cirque, you go to see some amazing stuff. You go to see how 
far we can push the human body and you are astonished by the skill. That’s 
TRON, old and new. It is a wonder of the human imagination. A virtual 
wonderland.

Even the movie Hackers (another favorite) was like this. If you tried to take 
that movie seriously and compare it to what was really possible, you’d be 
disappointed, but if you saw it from the creator’s eyes and how computer people 
“sound” to people who don’t understand what we’re saying, it made perfect 
sense. That movie was the re-creation of hearing people talking about a kill -9 
on a process. If you asked any hacker what his dream girl might be like, maybe 
she did ride a motorcycle and skate around on rollerblades. She certainly had 
the fastest computer which was better than yours and could hack you under the 
table.  That movie was also a work of art.

As a bonus for the Unix geeks, there’s some actual *real* Unix stuff in this 
movie when Sam goes through his father’s history and executes some previous 
commands. I thought that was pretty cool. Usually movies get this all wrong. I 
mean, in the Matrix, Trinity took down some power grid using nmap, which is a 
port scanner. It sure looked cool, but it really didn’t make any sense.

“This is Unix. I know this.” – Jurrasic Park

One of the members of the TRON team said not to over analyze it and get lost in 
the world, and that’s my advice as well. Try to become a child again and 
imagine being a 5-10 year old and being blown away by the light cycle races. 
Imagine what’s ticking in their mind and what seeds are being planted.

The original TRON is responsible for a lot of things that we enjoy today. Daft 
Punk draws their inspiration from the movie, many people got into technology 
because of it, movies were inspired by it and so on.

After watching the movie, I was left wanting more, which is always a good sign. 
I felt like they could have given us one hour more of this beautiful world. I 
didn’t want it to end. That’s what Avatar was for me. The story was basically 
Pocahontas in space, which really didn’t interest me, but the idea around real 
living things being driven by a remote host was what really piqued my interest. 
The creation of a whole new world that I could get lost in, was just amazing. I 
watched it three times just to see that world and I blocked out what everyone 
was saying.

The new TRON is sexy, the soundtrack is amazing, the world is beautiful, the 
characters are awesome and the 3D is amazing.

I don’t normally recommend that you see anything in 3D, but I wouldn’t see this 
movie any other way. As a matter of fact, see it on IMAX if you can. Just 
remember, it is a Disney film. Put your child hat on and let go of being an 
adult for a while. I think you’ll really enjoy it. If nothing else, you’ll be 
pining for your very own TRON suit and End Of Line club with your very own Daft 
Punk to play songs for you.

You can view a short TRON: Legacy Featurette below. Plus, watch our interviews 
with cast and crew Part 1 and 2 (with the original Tron director and more about 
the fashion) here, and Part 3 and 4 (with Jeff Bridges and Olivia Wilde) here.

You can also pledge your allegiance for TRON vs Avatar here. I watched Avatar 3 
times, and I’ve pledged to watch TRON at least 4.

CrunchBase Information
The Walt Disney Company
Information provided by CrunchBase

       


     



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