I loved the soundtrack of the original, and am heartbroken that Wendy Carlos is no longer with us
Really?

I loved the soundtrack of the original, and am heartbroken that Wendy Carlos is no longer with us
Do you have a link ot that interview by any chance?
Do you have a link ot that interview by any chance?
http://blog.moviefone.com/2010/12/21/tron-legacy-screenwriters-interview/
^^
That makes it sound like Clu's army would never have made it out into the real world, then, that one only dude would have made it. Wouldn't Flynn have known that?
Crap. I thought for sure I'd heard she'd passed several years ago. But according to Wiki and Notable Names Database, she's still alive and kicking.I loved the soundtrack of the original, and am heartbroken that Wendy Carlos is no longer with us
Really?When did that happen?
I'm not sure what you mean here. Last I saw, Wendy Carlos is still alive and well.I loved the soundtrack of the original, and am heartbroken that Wendy Carlos is no longer with us, and therefore not in a position to revisit her old score in Tron: Legacy.
I think my only criticism of the film was some of the dialog was cheesy and there were some scenes where I was like "They took that out of Star Wars and The Matrix." For example, there was a scene where they were flying above the grid and Sam took the controls to fight the other jets. Everything about that scene screamed Star Wars and Luke and Chewie battling the tie fighters. As for the Matrix, a lot of movies have taken effects from the Matrix so that's really nothing new.
But far, far too much is that Hans Zimmer crap where a single theme (or just a progression of chords!) is repeated, over and over, louder and louder. It builds tension all. But, then, rhythmically hitting someone in the head with a hammer would build suspense about the next blow, too. At one point I was writhing in agony.![]()
I think there's actually a theme to think about there, that contrasts the religious overtones in the original Tron. In the original, there was definitely some thinking to be done with Users being, oddly enough, personal "gods" who even "intelligently designed" the universe and inhabitants of the beings below them. In Legacy though, that is turned about on its head. We discover it is "turtles all the way down", and that Users are not the gods it seems at first; the digital world has its own natural life.
My only big complaint is that I don't feel like the movie ever really explained what The Grid is, and how it worked. Is it one computer? Is it the internet? Where did a computer come from that is powerful enough to simulate reality and populate it with sentient beings? Even the most powerful supercomputers in the real world can't simulate a single human brain, and The Grid is supposed to have been around since the 1980's. Or am I all wrong and The Grid has some kind of metaphysical nature?
I feel like this movie requires a lot of suspension of disbelief to be fully enjoyed.
But far, far too much is that Hans Zimmer crap where a single theme (or just a progression of chords!) is repeated, over and over, louder and louder. It builds tension all. But, then, rhythmically hitting someone in the head with a hammer would build suspense about the next blow, too. At one point I was writhing in agony.![]()
That part I disagree about, with Hans Zimmer. Sometimes he's gone a bit far, but I actually thought it worked GREAT in Inception.
did anyone else see the enormous costume blooper with Flynn Sr., where he had his identity disc on his back after it got stolen and before he stole it back?!
did anyone else see the enormous costume blooper with Flynn Sr., where he had his identity disc on his back after it got stolen and before he stole it back?!
Yeah, that could've been clearer - the clamps going dark, for instance.did anyone else see the enormous costume blooper with Flynn Sr., where he had his identity disc on his back after it got stolen and before he stole it back?!
Are you sure you were seeing the actual disc on his back? Maybe it was just the mount that the disc clamps onto.
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