Tron 3 is coming (and Garrett Hedlund is confirmed to come back)

Discussion in 'Science Fiction & Fantasy' started by Mach5, Dec 13, 2012.

  1. Flying Spaghetti Monster

    Flying Spaghetti Monster Vice Admiral Admiral

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    I was just going to post that. Quorra rocks!
     
  2. Admiral_Young

    Admiral_Young Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    There's no reason why Olivia shouldn't be back. I believe she's contracted for a sequel (like Garrett) and she did return to voice Quorra in "Tron Uprising". She appeared in the viral videos as well, so I expect her to return.
     
  3. Mach5

    Mach5 Admiral Admiral

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    I think she already pretty much confirmed it (I read it in an interview a couple of months ago). Also, Cillian Murphy (Dillinger Jr.) is a must too!
     
  4. Mark_Nguyen

    Mark_Nguyen Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Indeed. Wasn't that pretty much the only reason he was in Legacy int he first place?

    I do hope we'll see a new grid though. The one from Legacy was created with the incredible high technology of the late 1980s, so I think the modern interneted, wified, smartphoned series of tubes of the mid 2010s would be real fun to explore!

    Mark
     
  5. Cutter John

    Cutter John Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

    That was one of my gripes about Legacy. That we didn't see the grid or even the city from the first film represented with current CG tech.
     
  6. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    My problem with Legacy is that it reflected the modern CG aesthetic -- make everything CG look as real as possible -- instead of the aesthetic of the original TRON, which was just the opposite -- to make everything, including the traditional cel animation and the live actors, look as much like CG animation as possible. TRON was essentially an animated movie (at least the Grid portions) using modified images of live actors as an element of the animation. At the time, it was impossible for CGI to resemble reality, so artists were experimenting with it as a new art form, a way to create imagery unlike anything seen before. TRON was an experiment with the new design possibilities of CG and it embraced the unreality of it. In fact, on the TRON DVD commentaries, you can hear the director of the original movie lamenting that filmmakers today have abandoned those experiments and now only use CGI to try to replicate the look of physical reality. Yet that's exactly what Legacy did. It made the Grid look like an exotic but essentially physical world, and even used a lot of physical sets and costumes with glowy bits built in, unlike the hand-animated virtual sets of the original. So it's the exact opposite aesthetic from the original, which is why to me it fails as a continuation. And that's not even counting how drab and monochrome the new Grid is. (Not to mention how wrong they get Flynn's character. He wasn't some populist rebel who wanted information to be free; on the contrary, his goal was entirely capitalist, to reclaim control of his intellectual property and the profit that came with it.)

    Uprising comes closer to the aesthetic of the original, since it actually is a CGI cartoon. That's exactly what the makers of the original wanted to create but lacked the technology to achieve, so they had to try to fake it with cel animation and hand-modified images of live actors. Now we can do it for real. Personally I think Legacy should've done all the Grid sequences as full CGI in a stylized design. That would've been truer to the artistic intentions of the original. But Uprising does give us that, although I'm not crazy about the specific design style they use (particularly the ridiculously distorted female figures). Uprising still suffers from using the blander world of the sequel -- I hate it that the region beyond the city is just a lot of snowy mountains instead of the psychedelic landscape of the original -- but at least they let it look cartoony and unreal. And it is at least somewhat more colorful here and there. Plus it's nice to see that the Tron/Renegade costume (or surface texture?) is white instead of black, a nice callback to the original look. (Except I always find it silly when this guy who wants to sneak into facilities with all-black walls and floors does so wearing the only white costume in the whole Grid.)
     
  7. marillion

    marillion Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Some of the best news I've heard this week... I loved Legacy and have found it to be completely watchable time and time again... Uprising has been a pleasure to watch and unlike some, I really like the renderings of the characters. I'll admit to being an unabashed fanboy of both movies...

    There are so many ways they could go with a follow up, with or without Bridges, but I'm pretty sure he'll be back in one way or another... He is literally part of the grid now and I'm thinking the next chapter will focus on the Dillingers trying to figure out a way to capture and take over the grid for their own nefarious schemes... Tron will have to be more of a focal point though, and I think that will happen...
     
  8. Dick Whitman

    Dick Whitman Commodore Commodore

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    Another big problem with Legacy was most of the best ideas of the original were ignored. That the Grid was mirror of our world. Not a copy. That the programs were representations of their human users. There is great potential for using the Grid as a metaphor for our very fast progressing technological real world.
     
  9. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    The idea in the original was really a rather Disneyesque, semi-mystical, fairy-tale view of computers -- that there was this whole world inside computers and programs were living things imbued with the souls of their creators. It wasn't something humans knowingly created or were even aware of until Flynn got zapped inside. It was more of an anthropomorphic cartoon metaphor for computers, the way, say, Osmosis Jones was an anthropomorphic cartoon metaphor for the interior of the human body with talking, personified immune cells and whatnot. It was also kind of a forerunner of the Digimon anime franchise, which also tends to treat the "digital world" as a parallel reality and ascribe animistic consciousness to the software within it.

    But Legacy came along in an era when computers were less of a magical, exotic realm, and when the American moviegoing audience (not being prone to animism) wouldn't have been as receptive to a magical cartoon metaphor like that. So they retconned it and treated the Grid more as a computer simulation created by Flynn and its occupants as artificial intelligences he designed. It's a more science-fictional approach rather than the fantasy approach of the original. So it doesn't quite fit.
     
  10. marillion

    marillion Vice Admiral Admiral

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    ^^ But the potential is there... I think that was Flynn's ultimate intent (bridging the gap between the digital divide, as it were... I think his vision was to have a Grid that allowed users the ultimate interface. Back when the original came out, a lot of computer users were writers... My friends who had Apple IIs and Commadors wrote programs, exactly like the characters in Tron did... Had Flynn not been trapped inside his own creation, I think his goal would have been realized and we, the people of today, wouldn't be "surface users," or just using the programs created by a handful of programmers.

    The potential is there for Sam to continue his father's work in bridging that gap and allow the rest of the real world to become more intertwined with the digital world now that true AI (the ISOs) has been realized. Not that the prospect of that isn't fraught with it's own set of problems...

    OR - Maybe it's just a Disney movie and I should really just relax... :lol:
     
  11. Unicron

    Unicron Boss Monster Mod Moderator

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    [yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCmeQaXuFig[/yt]

    JEFF BRIDGES! :D
     
  12. Admiral_Young

    Admiral_Young Fleet Admiral Admiral

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  13. Dick Whitman

    Dick Whitman Commodore Commodore

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    So what is going on with Uprising? I moved recently so I have not been following its scheduling. Last time I saw a new episode must of been in the summer and there were reruns the next few weeks after that.
     
  14. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    I don't think the writers of the original film were concerned with anything like that. It was more about programmers getting to retain ownership/credit/control of their own work rather than having it co-opted by the corporate regime. It was more of a labor-vs.-management thing than anything to do with the modern open-source movement. If the younger Flynn in Legacy had really been acting on behalf of his father's values, he wouldn't have pirated the company's software and let everyone have it for free so the company lost money; he would've ensured that the individual programmers who worked for the company were the ones who got the profits when the software was sold. The aggressively capitalist, profit-oriented Flynn of the original movie would've been horrified by his son's act of computer piracy.


    There was a run of new episodes last month or thereabouts, and apparently Disney XD is burning off the rest of the episodes at midnight on Sunday nights (i.e. Monday mornings). I didn't notice the schedule change since I watch it via On Demand (which shows it letterboxed, commercial-free, and without those humongous animated promos blocking my view).
     
  15. Mach5

    Mach5 Admiral Admiral

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    Piracy? Hm, probably, yes, but...

    Sam was basically claiming ownership over the software, though I guess it isn't really that simple.
     
  16. Mr. Laser Beam

    Mr. Laser Beam Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Well, to be technical, it's not even the same Grid. The one in the original was a world inside every computer. The Legacy version was a private self-enclosed Grid created by Flynn alone. Which might explain the stylistic differences.
     
  17. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    The point is, Sam made a bootleg of the software available on the Web, costing the company money. Kevin Flynn in the original was motivated purely by monetary profit. Sure, when he was inside the Grid, he was fighting to free the Programs from the MCP, but only so that their programmers in the real world, like Alan and Lora and himself, would be able to retain control of their own creations and not be robbed of the profits for their work. Kevin's happy ending in the original was that he ended up ultra-rich, controlling the company, and flying around in his own helicopter. He wasn't out for some grand altruistic ideal. He wanted to get rich himself rather than seeing Dillinger get rich off of his work.
     
  18. Enterprise is Great

    Enterprise is Great Vice Admiral Admiral

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    I missed several episodes even though I have my DVR set to record all new episodes of Uprising but for some reason they never were recorded. I'm not sure why. Now I need to make sure I record it episode by episode now. I'm guessing DirectTV screwed me over somehow. Sundays at midnight...The show must be doing poorly in the ratings.
     
  19. bullethead

    bullethead Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    By Disney's unrealistic standards (probably based on the live action stuff on XD), yes. It doesn't help that they've never managed to consistently advertise the show and keep it in a time slot, which really hurts the chances of it getting a sustainable audience.
     
  20. Dick Whitman

    Dick Whitman Commodore Commodore

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    I will probably wait to watch Uprising when it comes out on DVD/Blu Ray. Its been so long I have to rewatch the early episodes to get into the new ones.