Posts tagged Legacy
Fnets! Watch TRON Legacy Online Movie DG Free Streaming
Jan 9th
By joejon
The Hit Box Office of TRON Legacy Movie has earned $ 130,900,000 in the U.S. at the first 17 days. Bridges talk to Tron Legacy event in this exclusive video interview. Tron Legacy maintains its position as third in the American box office the weekend of New Year’s and gets $ 18,300,000. Only four percent during the Christmas weekend. The film has generated $ 130.9 million in the U.S. so far, and added $ 65 million of foreign income.
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The total distance from the Tron Legacy was just over $ 196 million. This bodes well for the general public based on TRON: Evolution of video games Disney Interactive Studios which released a week after the hit 3D movie screen. Generations of fans, who waited more than 28 years Walt Disney Studio TRON keeps coming back to the big screen for the 3D movie on the big screen. TRON: Legacyis a 3D action-packed adventure in the digital world like nothing captured on the big screen.
Watch TRON Legacy VISIT NOW >>> http://WWW.51jkml.com
Sam Flynn (Garrett Hedlund), a rebellious 27 year old, is not haunted by the mysterious disappearance of his father Kevin Flynn (Oscar and a Golden Globe Award winner Jeff Bridge), a man formerly known as the world’s leading developer video games. Watch now for more stories
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‘Tron: Legacy’ provides plenty of dumb, fun action (with trailer)
Jan 8th
BY JOE TYRRELL NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM
Far back in the mists of the 20th Century, no soothsayer could have foretold the legacy of “Tron.”
The 1982 Disney production was set on the dawn of a new frontier, as a pioneering trek into the world of computer animation. While the simulations, and the writing, were as primitive as any Wild West dime-novel, its day-glo colors and optimistic message pointed the way toward a bright future.
A modest success, that “Tron” nevertheless amassed a cult following. As Kevin Flynn, the hacker hero of the first movie who returns in “Tron: Legacy,” explains to his son, the goal was “a system where all information would be free and open.”
Ahem.
Moving right along to the 21st Century, “Tron: Legacy” puts Jeff Bridges back on the grid as Kevin Flynn. While Bridges is always a welcome presence, “Tron: Legacy” dares ask the question, “How much of the Dude is too much?” It offers not only an attractively grizzled actual Jeff quoting Zen aphorisms, but glimpses of his younger and sleeker self.
Above all, there’s a heapin’ helpin’ of digitally enhanced and de-aged Bridges. Whether that’s effectively creepy or merely creepy may depend on your tolerance for 3-D adventures in dataland, where Bridges v.3 now presides as Kevin Flynn’s alter ego Clu, Codified Likeness Utility.
Bruce Boxleitner also is back on board as Flynn’s ally in unearthing nefarious goings-on at the Encom Corp., Alan Bradley. His digital alter ego Tron was the heroic computer athlete and warrior of the first film.
Neither Boxleitner nor Tron are given much to do this time around. That’s still better than Cindy Morgan, who played his gal pal. Despite a campaign by fans, she has disappeared entirely. Hollywood’s data file reads: Jeff Bridges, beloved star born to show business; Bruce Boxleitner, that guy who was in “Babylon 5;” Cindy Morgan, middle-aged woman.
Instead, the film chooses to focus on Flynn’s wealthy slacker son Sam, pining for the father who disappeared years ago.
Played by Garrett Hedlund with all the nuance of a back-up disk, Sam is the typical Hollywood young male character: characterless except for ill-advised, vaguely anti-social, daredevil behavior that makes for scenic stunts. Seven letters, starts with “a,” ends with “e.”
Agitate. Sam likes to agitate. On the other hand, the target audience for this film is boys of all ages. And a major motorcycle company just loves the product placement.
Faster than Sam can say, “What you see is what you get,” he gets sucked into the digital space where his father colorfully cavorted so many years ago. Now, it’s a city of night, stacked with violent spectacles, sinister monumentalism, members-only debauchery, proto-facist ideology and permanent preparation for war. In pursuing perfection, Clu has created a virtual Washington, D.C.
In a world where everyone else seems to be wearing black leotards with jackboots, vests and metal disks, Sam is quickly picked up by helmeted police and assigned to “games.” Four Barbiesque young women in light gray and white leotards give him a makeover for combat with disks. Gem, the blondest and Barbiest of them all, even shows some personality. When Sam asks what to do, she advises, “Survive.”
Enlivening the dim decor, trails of light flow from those dangerous disks and speeding motorcycles as Sam competes against the natives. At last he is rescued by Olivia Wilde of “House,” playing a hot-rodding Bohemian type who is not with the program. One might expect her to be named Flash Drive, but in one of its missed opportunities, the movie opts for Quorra.
There is no available evidence that Olivia Wilde can ever be made to look bad, but that doesn’t stop wardrobe from trying. She’s stuck in the black uniform of most characters, and while others have colored patterns, Wilde’s spatter of white dots and trickled lines looks like she used it as a drop cloth while painting her ceiling.
Added to that is a black wig, apparently intended to reinforce Wilde’s already androgynous look but instead suggesting Louise Brooks after an encounter with a hedge clipper.
The best idea in “Tron: Legacy” is a wonderful backstory for Quorra, which it promptly shoves aside to be handled in a coming video game. In the present, all information is proprietary and will be merchandised for big bucks.
Like Sam, the movie for a time seems to lose interest in Quorra in favor of two more flamboyant characters. Gem returns, and as embodied by Beau Garrett she is not only much more 3-D than Olivia Wilde but is awarded a costume that enhances those curves. (Although both actresses can be glad they have gotten past “Turistas.”)
Garrett has an even showier ally in Michael Sheen. Seen recently as Tony Blair in the estimable “The Queen” opposite Helen Mirren, Sheen here plays a character who combines elements of Blair, Elizabeth II and Liberace. Acting!
Sheen and Garrett clearly enjoy themselves, and Wilde’s expressive face conveys more than her underwritten lines. “Tron: Legacy” offers plenty of dumb, fun action. Some of its effects are beautiful, and the 3-D, while not as well realized as “Avatar,” adds the occasional swoosh.
But like so many Hollywood scripts, this one seems to arise from unresolved family issues. Sam’s reunion with his father is oddly written and staged, with little of the emotion or even conversation that a real one might engender. (Their dinner with Quorra is notable mainly for the full roast pig on the table. Poor hapless piggy, to be the only animal in this digital world to end up there.)
As for subsequent developments, let’s just say that as family get-togethers go, the Flynns’ doesn’t work out quite as well as the Prodigal Son’s.
For all its other problems, Syfy’s recently cancelled series “Galactica” put characters into a well-realized virtual world and conveyed a sense of what it would be like to live inside, and gradually master, a shoot-’em-up game.
“Tron: Legacy” lacks any such emotional or intellectual investment. Still, it can be entertaining. Some snowy Saturday, go to the movies and just put your mind on hold, do what you’re told. There is a message, only now it is: Buy our game.
Joe Tyrrell may be reached at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Zonets! Watch TRON Legacy Online Movie Free Streaming MEV
Jan 4th
By bangjeks
The TRON Legacy Movie has earned $ 130,900,000 in the U.S. at the first 17 days. Bridges talk to Tron Legacy event in this exclusive video interview. Tron Legacy maintains its position as third in the American box office the weekend of New Year’s and gets $ 18,300,000. Only four percent during the Christmas weekend. The film has generated $ 130.9 million in the U.S. so far, and added $ 65 million of foreign income.
Zonets! Watch TRON Legacy Online Movie Free Streaming MEV. Ranking at the Box Office back achieved by Disney “Movie TRON Legacy” with the genre of Science Fiction comes with a cool visual 3D effects. oke friend immediately visit our website to watch via live online. copy & paste the link below.
To Watch TRON Legacy VISIT >>> http://WWW.51jkml.com
The total distance from the Tron Legacy was just over $ 196 million. This bodes well for the general public based on TRON: Evolution of video games Disney Interactive Studios which released a week after the hit 3D movie screen. Generations of fans, who waited more than 28 years Walt Disney Studio TRON keeps coming back to the big screen for the 3D movie on the big screen. TRON: Legacyis a 3D action-packed adventure in the digital world like nothing captured on the big screen.
Watch TRON Legacy VISIT NOW >>> http://WWW.51jkml.com
Sam Flynn (Garrett Hedlund), a rebellious 27 year old, is not haunted by the mysterious disappearance of his father Kevin Flynn (Oscar and a Golden Globe Award winner Jeff Bridge), a man formerly known as the world’s leading developer video games. Watch now for more stories
.
http://WWW.51jkml.com
.
TRON: Legacy iPhone game’s play is based on movie’s vehicles
Dec 27th
Rather than emulate the various console games linked to TRON: Legacy, Disney Interactive’s iPhone game, linked to its TRON sequel, puts you in the driver’s seat of a pair of vehicles from the film’s world. While driving those vehicles, the iconic light cycle and the offensively capable recognizer, is competent, it’s not exactly fun, and the game is pretty derivative of other entries into the industry.
TRON: Legacy has you playing through a tournament of two kinds of events: light cycle races and recognizer attack runs. Both halves of the game use tilting your iOS device to control the vehicle, and touch controls run functions like gas and brake on the light cycle and firing the recognizer’s guns.
You’ll play through far more races than recognizer events, which are on-rails shooting portions that require you to blast turrets and tanks by tilting your iPhone to aim. Completing events earns you points to advance to the next set of events, but they’re all generally the same: Races can range from one to four competitors, and usually require you to run several laps on a track, while recognizer events are always the same, but with different landscapes.
Overall, neither event really shines. Races are decent, but if you fall behind, don’t ever expect to catch up to your opponents. The game also handles almost exactly like the latest edition of Nintendo’s Mario Kart series on the Wii — as you race, you’ll snag item boxes that give you special powers, but they aren’t particularly useful. The recognizer events have even less going on. Aiming and shooting are all you’ll do, and the only way you’ll place in the events is to pick your shots and avoid firing lots of shots and missing often.
TRON also includes a head-to-head online multi-player mode in which you can race light cycles against other players, and if there’s a situation in which the races are actually fun, this is it. Limiting the app to just head-to-head play keeps the races from being too terribly intense, however; it works, but if you know a track at all, you can pretty easily dominate — and get dominated in the reverse situation.
For a dollar, TRON does some things very well. It looks good, it includes audio tracks from Daft Punk that were featured in the film, and it utilizes some well-conceived controls. But TRON isn’t exactly original, and not terribly exciting. It’s hard to be any good at the game, and there’s not much that will keep you coming back when you’re bored. Still, it’s hard to complain at this price.
Nets3d! Watch TRON Legacy Online Movie Streaming Free
Dec 26th
By fokers
Notes of TRON Legacy Movie, Ya When I saw the graphic theme stream news, it took about 10 seconds for me to think that TRON Legacy is very cool, it is not surprising that the team was looking forward to the following elit in neon the classic 1982. It seems others share our sense of expectation – “Tron: Legacy” turned up a number one weekend box office, pulling in $ 43.600.000 halls in the United States and Canada.
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But the thing is that most of the geek senses tingling: a Hollywood lesson in how to look 28 years younger. The idea of pitting one against the film star younger self is nothing new, but the “TRON: Legacy” is the first to take the plunge. Thus, Flynn, who was Jeff Bridges v.2010, Clu is at war, playing Jeff Bridges v.1982, digitally youthful chip off the old block.
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Effects like a lot of work. According to the “Tron: Legacy” animation director Steve Preeg, Jeff Bridges, the leadership team began work in mid-2008. Was created to lay his head, his face now and numerically compared with the 1982 original TRON. And hundreds of motion capture points are attached to the face. ok friend watch this live movie now for more story.
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Ror Reviews: Tron: Legacy
Dec 22nd
Tron Legacy is a difficult film to review in many ways. It’s a sequel to a cult 80s movie that everyone probably remembers, but remembers fondly? Well, lets just say we;re not talking about Blade Runner 2. Depending on whether you saw it, liked, it, loved it, where indifferent to it or maybe even hated it will effect your reasons for going to see this sequel.
Tron 2. Tron: Legacy. Was that first movie even good enough to warrant a legacy? I’m sure there are many who will proclaim its greatness, but in reality, it was a moderately entertaining sci-fi actioner, ahead of it’s time maybe, with half decent performances and a plot that could have been scribbled on a beer mat. If that floats your boat you will love this sequel. Don’t get me wrong, I did like Tron. But no more than I liked The Last Starfighter, Flight Of The Navigator ..any number of movies that I remember and enjoyed as a kid. When I heard about the sequel I was intrigued because of that sense of nostalgia. Then a slew of pretty good(great?) trailers hit and I was well up for it.
The story should really be the selling point here. It’s been said that even if you haven’t seen the original that you can step into Tron 2 and still grasp the story but basically that’s a load of shit. You may comprehend what’s going on but you will never 100% be integrated into the world, or invested the characters that have been established in the previous film. Plot wise, here you are. Kevin Flyyn is trapped in the grid, his son must fight to free him. There might be a wee bit more to it, but honestly not much. “Ok” you say, you weren’t coming to this film for a great plot? Listen up. Visually and aurally it’s [frick]ing amazing. Daft Punk really up their game wit the soundtrack. A throwback that reminded me of Vangelis’ score for Blade Runner back in the day. The CGI and 3d work fantastically. The world isn’t as fully realized as say Avatar but it doesn’t need to be. The Grid is supposed to be a computer generated environment after all and it immerses you in that world. Fantastic action sequences with frisbees and light cycles and shit. I don’t mean to sound flippant, it works as great action but if you don’t give a [frick] about the characters involved then is it really worth a damn? The answer is of course: No it [frick]ing isn’t.
The main protagonist, Sam Flynn, is not a character. He is a cliche. A walking, talking advert for the trailer. He doesn’t even really have a lot of dialog. He says things like: ” NOT GOOD!” and: “ENJOY YOUR SWIM” and various other garbage that may excite a child. For me he kinda came across as a bit of a cocky tool and never really connects on any kind of emotional level. Which might be ok if we weren’t asked to make that connection. But as I’m sure you know, the whole crux of the the story is Sam’s reunion with his long lost father Kevin, who has been trapped in the Grid for years. In fairness to Garret Hedlund, he does the best with what he has. The guy does have screen presence. And, Jeff Bridges is as awesome as ever as Flynn and his younger doppleganer Clu(sometimes believable, sometimes not). He is the emotional core of the story(for me anyway) and keeps me trucking along with the nonsensical plot which I’m not even going to get into(It would take too long…honestly). Another bonus is Olivia Wilde as Quorra. Impressive as the only other sympathetic character. Then we have Martin Sheen as probably the most pointless character in movie history. I swear to the Cylon God he made the entire cinema look around in disbelief as he pranced around like a reject from The Rocky Horror Picture Show.
Tron: Legacy is an entertaining movie. It’s exciting at times, and even manages a (small bit) of connection with it’s characters. But aside from an eye/ear gasm and Jeff Bridges there really isn’t that much to recommend. Lovers of the original movie may be equal parts vindicated and disappointed. I really don’t know. I suppose it all depends on what your looking for.
Oh, incidentally, Tron(the dude the film is named after) appears for about 3 and a half minutes. First he is good..then evil, then good again for absolutely no reason. Then dies with a helmet on. Tron there. In a film called Tron : Legacy. Brilliant.
Exclusive Q&A: Tron: Legacy Kicks Joe Kosinski’s Film Career in Motion
Dec 21st
When director Joseph Kosinski got the assignment to create the science fiction film Tron: Legacy, he had a lot to prove. A commercial and feature film director best known for his computer graphics and computer generated imagery he got famous for such CGI related television commercials as the “Starry Night” commercial for Halo 3 and the award-winning “Mad World” commercial for Gears of War.
Born in May 1974, the former Iowan was barely aware of the movies when the original TRON was released, but like a lot of his generation, he grew up on comics and video games. Having moved to Los Angeles, his professional career had its first boost when a graphic novel he was creating, Oblivion, stirred the interest of Disney. Then Warner Brothers engaged him to direct a remake of the sci-fi thriller Logan’s Run.
In making this big-screen debut with Disney’s Digital 3-D Tron: Legacy, a sort-of sequel to 1982′s original, he had to comprehend the first film, incorporate its star Jeff Bridges, apply all the most fantastic state-of-the-art effects and make a coherent enough story that would both serve the fans of the original and newcomers who had never seen it. Apparently he succeeded well enough since Tron: Legacy won the week’s sales figure sweepstakes grossing $67 million on its opening weekend.
Q: With a legacy film like this there is a responsibility on your shoulders; how does it feel?
JK: The first film pushed the envelope in so many ways technically, visually and conceptually, so I felt like in doing this movie I would have to push this film in all the same ways to live up to that first film. In every choice we tried to choose the most ambitious path possible.
Q: This legacy with actor Jeff Bridges, star of the original TRON, puts another responsibility on you, especially in having the director of the previous movie as your producer. How does that feel — the strain, the stress, and the drama.
JK: Getting Jeff on board was my first goal, and once I did, I felt a lot better. I approached him three years ago, before we had a script, before I even shot a test piece for the studio. I knew that having an actor of his caliber was important to be at the center of this movie when you’re taking people to this other world. So Jeff was the first part of the equation.
Then my second meeting was with Steve Lisberger, the director of the original TRON, and he could not have been more gracious in what he saw his role in making the film would be and how he wanted to support me and be there for anything I would need. It was incredible.
It was great having him as a producer on the movie as well. He gave me access to his archives of the first film, so I got to see the original sketches that [French graphic novel creator] Moebius did for the first movie, which was really cool.
Q: Are you a big comic book fan? A Moebius fan?
JK: I remember his books, but for me, my big inspiration was [futuristic illustrator] Syd Mead; he was a god. He was the man.
Q: Do you see this as sort of a classic mythological story or were you trying to figure out some new angles to good, bad, and evil, right and wrong, madness and sanity?
JK: Yeah I think it’s a TRON twist on a classic mythical story. It’s a father and son story, but it’s also has an interesting triangle of characters. You’ve got Kevin Flynn, his biological son in Sam Flynn, but also got this digital son in Clu. And it was that triangle of relationships that to me, was something that hadn’t been done before.
Q: You’re not making a romantic comedy or a dog story; it’s sci-fi. Was sci-fi inevitable in your life?
JK: For me science-fiction is a genre with no limits. I have a background in design and I love the idea of kind of creating these worlds and showing people things they’ve never seen before. So for me it seems like a good place to be working right now.
Q: What’s your favorite? I am asking about the obvious inspirations, but I also want to hear about the literary ones, the comic books, and the games. Are you a games boy?
JK: I grew up at the arcades in the ’80s like everyone else who was born at my time. So my gaming years were putting quarters into Galaga and Pole Position and those kind of games. I’m not an X Box or a Play Station 3 kind of guy.
Q: Are you a science-fiction book reader?
JK: As a kid I was a pretty voracious reader because that’s what you did but lately not so much. Now it’s all kind of image making.
Q: Who do you consider your godfathers in terms of the graphics, the visuals and technology?
JK: Stanley Kubrick, Ridley Scott, and Steven Spielberg of course. Raiders of the Lost Ark was the movie that blew my mind as a seven-year-old kid.
Q: Are you a tech geek as well in terms of exploring the limits of technology and where it’s going? Are you a favor of a silicon/carbon interface?
JK: I was the kid who was hanging out at the Mac store in the late 1980s rather than playing in little league. I was on Mac Paint when the first version came out, so I’ve always been a tech geek, always trying to push technology, but always trying to do something creative with it.
Q: Would you snort nano-bots to alter your body and mind? To make you live longer so you could make more movies to think of new ideas? That is, If you had that option.
JK: Absolutely. I would do it. You’ve got a connection? You’ve got a line on something like that?
Q: I’m working on it. When it came to coming up with this story, how much of it was this fixed idea? You have a responsibility to an older story but then you had to figure out how to diverge from it; at the same time you want to draw audiences so tell me about the conceptualizing…
JK: I promised the studio two things: I’d deliver them a father/son story at the heart of this film, but also I would create something that didn’t rely on seeing the first movie to appreciate it. That was the challenge with this movie — to make sure that there’s this kind of human relationship at the center of it, but also to try to capture a whole new audience and get them up to speed on the world of TRON so that they know everything they need to know in the first 10 minutes of the movie. That was a challenging thing.
Science-fiction films are tough enough with exposition when you’re trying to explain the rules of the world, but on top of that we’re trying to catch people up with 28 years of back story. So that certainly was a challenge and required a lot of work, especially on those opening scenes, to make sure that people go into this movie knowing everything they need to know. This is a movie where you’re going to have to pay attention to everything that’s said, because it all comes at you pretty fast.
Q: who had that idea of going from the 2D real world to 3D Tron world?
JK: We got that idea from The Wizard of Oz. It’s not my own. I always admired how The Wizard of Oz went from black and white to color when Dorothy got pulled in, so for me it felt like 3D was an amazing opportunity to kind of do the same thing.
Q: Alright, why Daft Punk for the soundtrack?
JK: I’ve been a huge fan of them for years and knew that there was a level of musicianship to their music that went beyond typically dance music. Obviously, they’re huge TRON fans, as you can tell just from seeing them, so I approached them very early in the process.
We had breakfast, talked about our favorite movies, favorite film composers, and it was clear that we shared this desire to create a new kind of film score. A classic film score with classic melodies and themes, but we wanted to combine orchestral and electronic music in a way that hadn’t been done before.
Q: You’ve had opportunities to do other remakes. What is it about the idea of remaking or building on a past cinematic legend that excites you?
JK: I think that’s more of a function of what studios are willing to take bets on these days. They love the idea of having a built in audience on any property, and those movies of the ’70s and ’80s provide that. TRON, we should just note in the story that it’s not a remake it’s a stand alone sequel. We’re building on the story of the original.
Q: You have lots of science-fiction ideas of your own or writers you want to pick from if you have your druthers?
JK: Yeah, I’m actually working on a project right now called Oblivion, which is based on a story I wrote and the script is being written by William Monahan, who won the Oscar for The Departed a couple of years ago. He’s just finishing up the first draft as we speak.
Q: What about taking some other classic science-fiction and doing it, like the stories Alfred Bester or J.G. Ballard or somebody like that?
JK: I’d love to. It would be great to go back and bring some of these unfilmable stories to life because now anything’s possible. I’m also working with Disney on a reimagining of the movie The Black Hole, I don’t know if you remember that.
Q: I love The Black Hole. I have it on DVD. What about your namesake — I assume you’re not related to Jerzy Kosinski?
JK: I am not.
Q: Not a bad namesake to have — maybe you’ll be making a Jerzy Kosinski book into a film. Or do you have literary pretensions?
JK: Someone already did Being There, and it’s hard to top that film, so I don’t know how I could do any better than that.
Q: What about branching out? In doing commercials you’ve got a variety of narratives you’ve worked with. Where will you go from here?
JK: I don’t know, we’ll see. Obviously this is the big push is to get the word out there about TRON: Legacy, but after the first of the year we’ll see which one of these projects I’m working on catches first.
Q: Were you anxious when you got this project? It’s great to finally get that feature out of the way, that first feature, but it is a lot on you for a first feature.
JK: Yeah most people you try to do that first movie somewhere where no one would see it and kind of get it out of the way, but it doesn’t’ look like I’m going to be able to do that with this movie. It seems like it’s going to be out there in the spotlight.
I feel very lucky and honored to have gotten the opportunity to make this movie and I’m really proud of the cast and crew that worked on it. Obviously a movie like this takes thousands of people to work on it. It’s not a one man job by any means, it’s a huge group of people, and I’m really proud of the movie and proud of the work they’ve put into it.
Q: What’s it like to live with a movie for so many years? Are you neurotic now?
JK: It’s a crazy process. There’s a point in the middle of it where you’re a year and a half into it and you still have a year and a half to go where it feels like it will never end. My wife had a baby boy for days after I finished shooting and now he’s 17 months old and the movie is still not out yet, which is insane.
Q: Finally, what do you think about the irony of having something as opposite as TRON possibly could be with True Grit out there at the same time? TRON, True Grit; they kind of fit together there in a sense but it must blow you away. Have you seen it?
JK: I have seen it and Jeff is fantastic in both movies. Everyone should see both of them for sure.
Q: It’s funny — you’ve got two very opposite genres at least in terms of setting. How do you feel about Westerns?
JK: I love Westerns. I actually was thinking as I made TRON I treated the world inside like a Western. I mean I kind of thought of our movie as that. It’s like light cycles instead of horses. But yeah it’s great. I think they go well together; it’s a good one-two combo.
Q: You’re going to have to get to Coen brothers to come see the movie.
JK: I’d love to see what they think.
The Tron Legacy Experience
Dec 21st
The “Tron Experience” is an experience like no other. It’s one part sequel, one part action movie, and one part 3D spectacle. Each part serves a different role in making the Tron Experience good and bad.
The Sequel: As a sequel it works. To Legacy’s benefit, the original Tron was so long ago that people don’t remember how bad of a movie it was. My guess is they had all tapes of the original destroyed. I absolutely loved Jeff Bridges as Kevin Flynn. He flexes his acting chops and lets his Tron light shine on the rest of the cast. Bridges appropriately adds some much needed humor to the film. Olivia Wilde is just as entertaining as she is beautiful. She’s really come a long way since Gossip Girls and The Legend of Bobby Z. Michael Sheen has little screen time, but is also equally electrifying as Castor. The biggest role, Sam Flynn, was played by Garrett Hedlund. He reminded me of a young Peter Weller and not in a good way. Hedlund came across more like a surfer boy than a tech nerd. Sam Flynn was the one character that could have used a recasting. It’s just too bad it happens to be one of the lead roles.
Action: Tron Legacy opens with a motorcycle scene and the action doesn’t stop until the movies over. The movie was stuffed full of action. There is racing, fighting, more racing, some more fighting, and some flying tossed in. Any action in this movie would be an upgrade from anything released in 1982. The amazing soundtrack from Daft Punk helps keep the action with their hypnotic up-tempo sound. The only issue I had with the action was Sam knowing how to use technology on the grid and him being an excellent fighter. Tron Legacy is asking for moviegoers to take a huge leap of faith. If you can take that leap, it won’t be a problem.
3D Spectacle: I really hate delivering bad news. I’m becoming more and more convinced that these movies don’t’ need to be in 3D. I’ve seen two movies that benefited from being in 3D, How To Train Your Dragons and Avatar. That’s the list. That’s not really that bead until you realize we’ve had 20 plus releases in 3D this year alone. The use of 3D in Tron Legacy isn’t as appalling as I thought it would be. There are some fight scenes where the visual effects are outstanding and the 3D helps enhance that. Unfortunately those scenes are far few and between.
My Grade: B-
Tron Legacy is more of an experience than a movie. I wished it was the other way around. For Tron fans, this movie is a treat. For regular movie fans, you’ll leave with the “you can do better than that” feeling. I can’t help but feel like the movie would have been 10x better with just Bridges and Wilde. I enjoyed the movie, but can’t think of anything memorable that happened. Tron Legacy does have some amazing special effects and one of our great all-time acting talents in Jeff Bridges. That just might be enough to keep people entertained.
No. 1 ‘Tron’ lives up to legacy
Dec 20th
LOS ANGELES — The weekend before Christmas is not the time when box-office hits are made, but it is when the early holiday flops are established.
Among the trio of new movies that opened just ahead of the two most important moviegoing weeks of the year outside of summer, the big budget sequel “Tron: Legacy” appears to have a solid chance at turning into a hit, while the kids’ cartoon adaptation “Yogi Bear” is a long shot, and the pricey adult dramedy “How Do You Know” is dead on arrival. They debuted to estimated ticket sales of $43.6 million, $16.7 million, and $7.6 million, respectively.
In addition, two low-budget films moved from limited to nation-wide release with strong performances. The Mark Wahlberg boxing story “The Fighter” raked in $12.2 million, while the psychological drama “Black Swan,” playing in less than half as many theaters as each of the other four movies, grossed $8.3 million.
“You come out now to be ready for that week between Christmas and New Year when every day is like a holiday,” explained Walt Disney Studios distribution president Chuck Viane.
Disney’s “Tron: Legacy” is the biggest bet of the holiday season. With a production budget estimated at around $170 million and millions more riding on current and future theme-park attraction, video game and television spinoffs, Disney is aiming to revive the 1982 cult favorite “Tron” as a multi-media franchise.
The solid but far from spectacular opening weekend results were driven mainly by adult males, many of whom are likely fans of the original. In good news for Disney, most moviegoers liked the movie, giving it an average grade of B plus, and they were willing to pay extra to see it in the best quality: 82 percent of ticket sales revenue came from theaters playing “Tron: Legacy” in 3-D and 24 percent was for digital or large-format Imax.
Overseas revenue was more muted, as “Tron: Legacy” took in a so-so $23 million from the 26 foreign markets where it debuted, including Britain, Spain, Australia and Japan. European ticket sales overall were soft, however, due to snowstorms on the continent.
The big question for Disney now is whether the PG-rated film can move from a fanboy-driven debut to an all-ages hit that families see together. If it does, “Tron: Legacy” could gross $200 million or more domestically and the same overseas. If it doesn’t, it could fizzle and end up a financial disappointment.
Warner Bros. is hoping that for families with young children, “Yogi Bear” will be the movie of choice as schools close for the holidays. A soft opening leaves it with a significant ground to make up given the animation/live-action hybrid movie’s $80 million cost.
One thing already clear is that “Yogi” won’t turn into a surprise smash like another classic cartoon adaptation that opened in mid-December: “Alvin and the Chipmunks.” That movie debuted to $44.3 million on the same weekend in 2007.
While “Yogi’s” overall CinemaScore was a B, those under 25 gave it an A minus, indicating that children are more likely than their parents to tell their friends to see it.
There’s no hope of box-office recovery for “How Do You Know,” directed by James L. Brooks and starring Reese Witherspoon, Owen Wilson, Paul Rudd and Jack Nicholson. Following middling reviews and a marketing campaign that failed to catch on, its weak opening was matched by a poor CinemaScore of C minus.
Sony Pictures spent more than $100 million to produce “How Do You Know,” making the movie a painful money-loser for the studio.
Brooks’ movies rarely have large openings, but “How Do You Know” came in weaker than the 2004 disappointment “Spanglish” and 1997 hit “As Good As It Gets.” Its failure provides more evidence that star-driven adult dramas with big budgets are no longer working for Hollywood.
“The Fighter” and “Black Swan” are both well positioned not only for the holidays but for awards season in January and February, when both movies are expected to follow their Golden Globes and Screen Actors Guild nominations with Oscar attention.
The performance of “The Fighter,” which got an A minus CinemaScore from an adult audience evenly divided between men and women, is similar to that of last year’s “Up in the Air,” which took in $11.3 million on its first weekend playing nationwide and ultimately grossed $83.8 million domestically. Relativity Media financed “The Fighter,” based on a true story, for $25 million, and the film is being distributed by Paramount Pictures.
The box-office performance of “Black Swan,” meanwhile, looks similar to that of the 2007 Coen brothers movie “No Country for Old Men,” which collected $7.8 million on its first nation-wide weekend. That Oscar-winning film went on to rake in $74.3 million; a similar total would be a huge win for “Black Swan,” as it cost Fox Searchlight and Cross Creek Pictures only about $13 million to make.
‘Tron: Legacy’ Pwns Competition: Box Office Report December 17 – 19
Dec 19th
If you wait long enough, it’s not a sequel, it’s the beginning of a whole new franchise. So it is with ‘TRON: Legacy,’ which proved so huge in its first three days that it rendered the original movie 28 years ago a mere footnote in the reboot’s success.
‘TRON: Legacy’ dominated the box office with an estimated $43.6 million, about $17 million more than the 1982 ‘TRON’ earned during its entire run. You’d think a sequel to a movie made nearly 30 years ago and beloved only by a cult of fanboys would face an uphill climb at the box office, but Disney deserves a lot of credit for expertly marketing the sequel, making sure it had state-of-the-art special effects, getting Jeff Bridges to return as the star (and to play opposite a CGI version of his younger self), and getting it into as many 3-D and IMAX theaters as possible.
In fact, IMAX screens made up more than 25 percent of the movie’s midnight opening take of $3.6 million early Friday, a record ratio for IMAX. Those spectacle surcharges, plus enthusiastic word-of-mouth, should keep the new ‘TRON’ a top moneymaker throughout the holiday season. Not to mention ensuring that Disney doesn’t wait another 28 years before making ‘TRON: Legacy: Legacy.’
Even so, given the hype, many pundits expected ‘TRON: Legacy’ to open even bigger, with estimates as high as $54 million. Similarly, ‘Yogi Bear’ was expected to open between $18 and $23 million, but it debuted with an estimated $16.7 million. Still, that was enough for an easy second-place finish for the 3-D adaptation of the old cartoon favorite. Reviews were unkind, but young children obviously didn’t mind (save for ‘Tangled,’ there was little else targeted at them), and lthe extra cash from glasses rentals didn’t hurt.
Last week’s No. 1, ‘The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader,’ actually did a smidge better than expected. After its weak opening, it was expected to have a second-weekend dropoff in the range of the first ‘Narnia’ movie (51 percent) or the second (59 percent), but it slipped just 48 percent to an estimated $12.4 million and a third-place finish. Still, even though it’s earned only $42.8 million domestically, it’s earned twice that overseas, so the prospect of a fourth ‘Narnia’ film seems secure.
Just a jab or two behind ‘Dawn Treader’ was ‘The Fighter,’ which expanded this week from four screens to 2,503 and earned an estimated $12.2 million. That was within the $11-to-$15 million range of expectations, which took into account the movie’s impressive opening last week ($75,000 per screen, slightly below initial estimates) and its massive awards-season buzz, including Golden Globe nominations for Best Drama, Best Director and for its four principal stars.
Rounding out the top 5 was ‘The Tourist,’ which lost 47 percent of its business due to weak word-of-mouth and took in another estimated $8.70 million. (That’s just a hair more than the estimated $8.68 million for ‘Tangled,’ so when final numbers are released Monday, the two may switch places.) ‘The Tourist’s’ two-weekend total is $30.8 million.
Two other movies entered the wide-release marketplace this weekend. One was ‘Black Swan,’ which vaulted from 90 to 959 screens and earned an estimated $8.3 million, good for seventh place. As with ‘The Fighter,’ positive reviews and strong Oscar buzz have made the Natalie Portman drama a big want-to-see, as reflected in ‘Black Swan’s’ $8,655 per-screen average, second only to ‘TRON: Legacy’ among this week’s wide releases.
The other, ‘How Do You Know,’ was a disappointment, opening at No. 8 with an estimated $7.6 million. Given a strong cast (Reese Witherspoon, Owen Wilson, Paul Rudd, and Jack Nicholson) and a lack of romantic-comedy competition, the movie had been expected to open between $10 and $13 million, but it sank beneath the weight of lackluster reviews.
The full top 10:
1. ‘TRON: Legacy,’ $43.6 million (3,451 screens), new release
2. ‘Yogi Bear,’ $16.7 million (3,515), new release
3. ‘The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader,’ $12.4 million (3,555), $42.8 million total
4. ‘The Fighter,’ $12.2 million (2,503), $12.6 million
5. ‘The Tourist,’ $8.70 million (2,756), $30.8 million
6. ‘Tangled,’ $8.68 million (3,201), $127.8 million total
7. ‘Black Swan,’ $8.3 million (959), $15.7 million
8. ‘How Do You Know,’ $7.6 million (2,483), new release
9. ‘Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part I,’ $4.8 million (2,860), $265.5 million
10. ‘Unstoppable,’ $1.8 million (1,874), $77.3 million
•Follow Gary Susman on Twitter @garysusman.
