I don't understand the attitude in regards to the original Tron. The computers then were clunky relative to today, so the world of Tron should seem that way compared to the world of Tron:Legacy. I would expect someone in the film (Flynn perhaps) to make a comment about how far computers have come, and what is now possible in the digital world.
Yeah, exactly. The slamming of the first film is rather awkward, considering the first one was considered quite an accomplishment in special effects. It was largely considered to be the first movie to use CGI. It's not only that they're slamming it, but it feels like they're sneering at it. For its time, the original was quite groundbreaking, and I think the use of modern CGI has a lot to thank Tron for. I'll put it this way. Sometimes there are movies certain generations will never really understand, much like painters during the rennaissance period. Some go their whole life studying these artists trying to find out what made them tick. I see Tron much in the same way. It may not have been a great movie, and it may have flopped at the box office, but it left behind a legacy, much in the same way the painters left their legacies, and a movie like Tron leaves behind several clues which people in the future might look at and study, and as such, the movie is more the sum of its parts. I think the press needs to realize this, that they need to look beyond what's on the surface, beyond the logistics of the first movie and see it for what it is.