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After the massive box office bust that was "Tron" it was surprising that
Disney would ever invest in another movie from the property again. In
many ways while the film was a failure, the concept was merely ahead of
its time and it deserved another chance at box office gold and a fan
base. Even decades after the film caught on with cult buffs and garnered
a fan base, the success of another "Tron" is still in doubt and with
this sequel, it's all still a gamble. Especially in the age of cynicism
where CGI epics are a dime a dozen. "Tron Legacy" isn't so much about a
game and the user that masters it as it is a son re-connecting with his
dad. Kevin Flynn is a man who was once like his son, very rebellious and
weary to the world who accidentally lost himself to his work. And his
son is now the carbon copy of his father, a young rebellious idealist
who has every intent to protest the system. The game of Tron is not so
much a tool to play a game as it is for a son to find his dad who lost
his soul in the cogs and circuits of his master creation, and the
lengths he'll go through to re-connect with the very man he worshipped
who taught him every lesson about fighting back imaginable.
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Garret Hedlund is a worthy
successor to Jeff Bridges as the new Flynn, a young man
named Sam whose entire world view is based around finding
every chance to tick off the master computer from the
inside. And when he finally gets the chance to fight the
system and find his father once and for all, he gets much
more than he bargained for. This time the game has changed.
The game has evolved. Instead of signifying the battle for
corporate control and the beginning of the video game age,
this is now a tool for love and family, a prop for a man to
not only find the only role model in his life, but for a man
to find himself. |
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This is a man who finds
himself through video games like many men do in the modern era, and with
Tron, the experience will bring Flynn in to age as a man willing to
accept responsibilities. Much like we saw in the original "Tron" with
Kevin Flynn. When
Sam confronts his father finally, he's forced to confront two versions
of his dad. The apathetic hermit and the megalomaniacal program, both of
whom have plans for the grid, and both of whom promise imminent
destruction of their worlds that Sam can not abide by, no matter how
anxious he is for a role model. "Tron Legacy" forges its own path as a
sequel and reboot and manages to pay tribute to the original film as one
of the most technologically and visually stunning films of the past two
years, and as a "Tron" property it delivers on all levels of action
packed segments including light cycles, characters who are just as
involving as the original Tron was, and a villain just as menacing and
even more so as the original Master Computer hoped to be. With special
effects that defy age, "Tron Legacy" is able to deliver for both
sections of old and new fans of the premise and is one of the more
criminally underrated science fiction epics of the last year I hope sees
more sequels and opportunities to tell its story of the grid and the
Flynns fighting for a better tomorrow.
One of the major
caveats of the story is that it suffers from a flabby run time, most of
which is comprised of weighty exposition with characters who have to
explain where they are, how they came to be, etc. all to give us a
better grasp of the narrative. The story sometimes comes to a screeching
halt just to explain characters and situations and fails to really let
us figure out character motivations on our own. Especially when it comes
to character Quorra. It's a shame a movie with such a visual feast feels
like it has to hold our hands through most of the story.
In spite of
weighty exposition and a long in the tooth run time, "Tron Legacy" is a
creative and imaginative success. It's a reboot and a sequel that pays
respect to its roots while also paving its own path in to the annals of
science fiction and action cinema, and it's a visually dynamic science
fiction epic that satisfies on all corners.
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