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Wednesday 9 February 2011

Tron Legacy (2010) review



Review: 3 out of 5 stars.

The first time I watched Tron was in the late nineties and I was around six years old. At the time, it was on satellite TV and this was before Sky had been widely available to everyone. I had NTL Broadband, the company is known as Virgin Media now. From what I remember, Tron was about a computer whiz named Kevin Flynn who is an employee at ENCOM, a software company, where he used to make the best video games for.

It was a well contrived film that is known for its remarkable imagination and stunning graphics at the time in 1982. Rumours of a forthcoming sequel in production and being green-lighted had spread. I even swore I saw a small ad for Tron 2 at an old rental store where I used to get blockbuster movies and thrilling martial arts films. At last, though, Tron Legacy is here in 2010 and reached theatres in December in most of Europe. When I first saw and heard what they were doing with this movie, I felt it was going to do an appalling job at the box office, but actually, it did become a feasible hit.

Tron Legacy is directed by Joseph Kosinski who is known in the commercial television and feature world as a wizard in computer graphics and visual effects. It stars Jeff Bridges who reprised his role as Kevin Flynn from the previous film and plays the digital counterpart, Clu 2, Garrett Hedlund plays his fully grown son, Sam Flynn, Bruce Boxleitner took on the role of Alan Bradley, a stepfather of Sam ad Tron; a security program. With a screenplay written by Adam Horowitz and Edward Kitsis, the film lasted 127 minutes, produced by Steven Bailey, Jeffrey Silver and writer and director of the first film, Steven Lisberger. It was distributed by Walt Disney Pictures.

Good:

Where the last instalment of Tron left off, Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges) has become CEO of ENCOM International and led the industry by storm until his sudden disappearance in 1989. His son, Sam Flynn (Garrett Hedlund), is left an orphan and heir to his father’s multi-national enterprise. Over two decades later, Sam became a rebel; he does not have any interest taking control of ENCOM and often makes fun of members in the board meeting with his skills in extreme sports. His last stunt gets him arrested by the police after he parachutes off from the ENCOM building. Alan Bradley (Bruce Boxleitner) then approaches Sam about a message he received on his pager, mysteriously sent by Sam’s father, ironically, the connection was cut for years. This came from an old arcade, without hesitation, Sam began to explore the abandoned place for clues only to find a room at the other side of the arcade inside a laboratory. He finds the computer and gets digitized by a prototype machine, some kind of laser.

In the opening scene, a few minutes into the film, evidence of a dysfunctional relationship is found between Kevin and Sam. Told in a fairytale or story book archetypical narrative, eight year old Sam is told by Kevin about the digital landscape hidden within a computer named “The Grid” where programs are represented as humanoid-electronic beings inside systems. This gives new audiences some closure and fills us with necessary information in order to know what it is about. Fans of the original film also are given ideas on where its source began and where it is heading. From the initial 30 minutes, we learn before Kevin was missing, he promised to change society through science, religion and medicine from his autobiographical book “The Digital Frontier”. Also, that Kevin had created a new User friendly system where programs and users can integrate. Those who are Tron fans know Kevin visited the virtual world once before.

Hedlund provided a great performance as Sam and made a convincing, heroic, protagonist in the sequel. His moments of loss, missing his Dad, can be felt by viewers but how the character deals with such aggravated emotions is quite intriguing. Any calculated or observant individual can see through his very hardened exterior and realise he is lonely. The story is not all that fantastic, considering it took at least thirty years to get a visionary project off the ground. However, its visuals and cinematography are nothing short of beautifying. The disc battles and light-cycle races are cool. This is where IMAX 3D comes in handy, it’s done in an ultraviolet fashion on a grand scale. Dark, lightning-filled, skies give the notion you are inside a videogame with futuristic cities. About forty minutes into Tron Legacy as Sam encounters the enigmatic Clu 2 (Bridges) and facing Rinzler (Anis Cheurfa), a masked warrior who fights against users or rogue programs, in a deadly battle with discs, he meets Quorra (Olivia Wilde).

Bad:

The problem with Tron Legacy is there is not much character development and the script is not that engaging to be on the level of Inception neither is the plot original. I have no qualms toward how successful this film is, on the other hand, it seems the film crew have leaned too much on the lens of 3D rigs and cameras plus various angles on the whole landscapes in the setting than actually focus upon the structure. There is an obvious style over substance here, and it did not help with two writers whose credits include television shows like One Tree Hill and Lost being under the wing of a fan boy director who only so far as done adverts. Another thing is the movie has a few holes in continuity and storyline; the positioning of characters within some medium and long shots and timeline. For example, how can a program (Clu 2) send a message to a pager? No sort of intelligence can do that. Plus how come Sam does not have the same god-like abilities as his father, I mean he is a user?

By the time Sam and Quorra locate Kevin in a wasteland off The Grid, tragedy is replaced by a need to leave which is a bit too quick. If given enough time, the dynamic between all of them should have been show more, especially from Kevin and Sam given that it is a father-son story. In the middle, Kevin reveals his gift to the real world were ISO’s (isomorphic algorithms), special beings of unknown origin who can unlock mysteries in the human condition. Clu 2 destroyed them as he believed they were a threat to the system. The message here from this meeting is hubris and perfection, which are good topics in action/adventure but more details of the purge of ISO’s and those contexts and themes should have been dealt with more. Sound was deafening including the robotic voices of programs, save for the Sirens, but was layered over by a superb music score from Daft Punk. I will not spoil Clu 2’s master plan but it’s not hard to work out.

Overall:

Tron Legacy is a fun, simple, thrilling motion picture with stunning 3D inspired CGI visuals in place of a slapdash script and faithful direction. Actors have played the characters with gravitas and energy. Although, I do feel Sam could have shown a little more resentment towards his Dad for being missing for so long but there was a sense of unsettlement, so I can’t really complain. The high point goes toward the score by Daft Punk, which is a very good choice and works extremely well along with the picture. With a lot to work with, sustenance would be the key in making us feel more satisfied. This is for people that want to be on their seat feeling energized and fans of the previous film.


- Written by Kbon