Tron Legacy 3D (2010) [Blu-ray 3D]
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close  Tron Legacy 3D (2010) [Blu-ray 3D]
Rated:  PG 
Starring: Olivia Wilde, Jeff Bridges, Michael Sheen, Bruce Boxleitner, Garrett Hedlund.
Director: Joseph Kosinski
Genre: Action | Adventure | Sci-Fi
DVD Release Date: 04/05/2011

***PLEASE NOTE: A Blu-ray 3D disc is only compatible with 3D Blu-ray players.***
Tagline: The only way to win is to survive.

Disney presents a high-tech motion picture unlike anything you've ever seen. Immerse yourself in the digital world of Tron, as celebrated actor Jeff Bridges stars in a revolutionary visual effects adventure beyond imagination. When Flynn, the world's greatest video game creator, sends out a secret signal from an amazing digital realm, his son discovers the clue and embarks on a personal journey to save his long-lost father. With the help of the fearless female warrior Quorra, father and son venture through an incredible cyber universe and wage the ultimate battle of good versus evil. Bring home an unrivaled entertainment experience with Tron: Legacy - complete with never-before-seen bonus features that take you even deeper into the phenomenal world of Tron.

Storyline: Sam Flynn, the tech-savvy 27-year-old son of Kevin Flynn, looks into his father's disappearance and finds himself pulled into the same world of fierce programs and gladiatorial games where his father has been living for 20 years. Along with Kevin's loyal confidant, father and son embark on a life-and-death journey across a visually-stunning cyber universe that has become far more advanced and exceedingly dangerous. Written by ZootCatchy

Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman, March 26, 2011 -- In there is our destiny.

In 2011, Tron might look more than antiquated. Released at a time when the merging of computer effects and cinema was only in the beginning stages, the film might have visually dazzled a few decades ago but to say it looks rough by today's standards is indisputable. Still, movies like Tron and The Last Starfighter not only pioneered the effects most audiences take for granted anymore, they also did something that many of today's films fail to achieve: build the effects around the story, in these two cases stories with great characters, quality scripts, and a fair bit of heart. Those values carry a movie more than any other element, whether a film hails from the silent era; is one of the early talkies; was filmed in black and white; dazzles with stop-motion special effects; or now, is constructed on hard drives and computer screens. When, nearly 30 years after its release, a sequel to Tron was announced and subsequently hit theaters, interest was piqued but expectations were uncertain. Tron was a pioneering film, a picture with an important place in cinema history but also one with a unique look and feel that's so simple it might not really translate all that well into 21st century standards. How could the filmmakers possibly ramp things up and keep the world of Tron looking clean and simplistically efficient while still taking full advantage of the horsepower of today's films and, just as important, keep the storyline going and re-capture the essence of the original? Somehow, they accomplished all of it; Tron: Legacy is one of those rare special effects films that can have its cake and eat it too. The picture is a dazzling tour-de-force of visual wonders, but it's also a good bit entertaining and, more important, finds a soul that grounds the entire thing in basic human emotions, even in a world where the heartless digital reigns supreme.

It is the year 1989, and since his adventures inside the digital "grid" in 1982, technology guru/video game developer/entrepreneur Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges, True Grit) has built up his technology firm ENCOM to astronomical heights. He's also settled down and is now father to a young son named Sam. One night, Kevin vanishes, leaving no trace of his whereabouts behind. Now, in the year 2011, Sam (Garrett Hedlund, Country Strong) has grown into a young adult, a man who's strong and smart but uninterested in leading his father's company. ENCOM is on the verge of releasing new software and seeing its stock traded all over the world; Sam has some digital fun at the board's expense, his way of paying them back for their bastardization the company from what it once was under Kevin's leadership. When ENCOM executive Alan Bradley (Bruce Boxleitner) reveals to Sam that he recently received a page from Kevin, Sam ventures to his father's old video game arcade, discovers a secret door, and is inadvertently pulled into the digital realm. Sam finds his father but discovers he's become a tyrant over cyberspace. He's challenged to a light cycle race against his father but is rescued by a rebel named Quorra (Olivia Wilde), who reveals that the man Sam believes to be his father is only a digital recreation; his real father has been on the grid but hiding since a coup rendered all the good Kevin had worked for null and void. Now, it's up to Sam and his long-lost father to reclaim the digital realm to ensure their future in the real world.

Tron: Legacy has a Christopher Nolan Batman Begins/The Dark Knight sort of vibe going on. The picture is incredibly dark, and it manages to construct a kinetic pace reinforced by slick visuals while also keeping things somewhat low-key in terms of raw spectacle. The world of Tron: Legacy, in those scenes that take place both in the real world and on the digital "grid," is one of darkness, mystery, an absence of clarity. It's given a visual and thematic darkness that translates into emotional import, a dangerous feel, a subtext that always suggests something that's not as it seems or should be. Daft Punk's score, too, carries over the picture's visual feel, playing with a reserved yet deep and heavy tenor that reinforces the sense of danger and wonder and darkness rather than give the movie a more generic high-flying Adventure/Sci-Fi sort of feel. Maybe it's a bit overplayed given that the story, ultimately, lacks much in the way of raw thematic purpose -- it's built more on special effects and human emotion more than anything else -- but the picture's darkly reserved but nevertheless high energy style gives it a unique flair that works incredibly well. If nothing else, Director Joseph Kosinski's visual and tonal façade give the movie a somewhat original appeal, but the primary reason this structure works so well, it would seem, is that it allows what are ultimately Tron-inspired basic but jazzed up special effects to work in context of the entire movie.

Indeed, Tron: Legacy just would not work were the special effects so far removed from the original picture that it became a sequel in name only. It wouldn't work, either, if suddenly the new movie looked like a hybrid between the future vision of Blade Runner and the juiced-up ridiculousness of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. The way the effects artists and production design team have progressed the cyber world of Tron can be described as nothing less than sheer visual perfection; this new picture retains the same lines, shapes, textures, and general visual style from the first film, only refining them, giving them a more polished -- but not radically altered -- appearance. Along with its seamless 3D visuals, the "grid" now has a greater sense of space than did its predecessor, but not a radically different technological foundation. The world of Tron: Legacy is unmistakably an advancement from that of the original, but not at the expense of the concept. Fundamentally, the pictures are the same, primarily separated only by time. What should feel old, feels old; what should feel new, feels new. Tron: Legacy is a case study in the effectiveness of reserved visuals; sure it was a necessary approach to keep the sequel in-line with the original, but the way the visuals have been updated, polished, and refined, and done so with respect for the original and in the context of the smartly reserved structural tone gives Tron: Legacy a look that's out of this world.

Ultimately, however, the success or failure of Tron: Legacy rides not solely on how well the filmmakers can achieve a new-old balance or how well the visual effects artists can slick up a light cycle; what really matters is if the film can find that emotional center, a soul that gives the movie a purpose beyond merely showcasing what modern computer graphics can do for the world of Tron. It achieves that need, too, through a script that might not be as witty and clever as it believes itself to be, but that underneath some of its weaknesses finds a strength of heart and purpose and humanity that ties the film, and the series, together very well. The characters are well-developed, whether returning old favorites or new key players in both the real and cyber worlds. Garrett Hedlund plays Sam Flynn quite well, giving the character a stature that allows him to walk with confidence but not cockiness. While there's a hint of the overly-dramatic, pun-filled, movie hero cliché type of vibe going on, the character fits right into the world; he's one who has both the mental faculty and the physical strength to survive on the harsh digital "grid." The character is well-written, portrayed as a daredevil type but with incredible smarts to back it up and round him into someone who can plausibly survive past the first deadly disc thrown in his direction. Jeff Bridges is excellent, too, aided in part by computer graphics but playing his dual roles with a command of the characters and an understanding of the film's place both in modern cinema and in relation to the old original. Bridges, forgive the pun, bridges the gap between the films, becoming not only the most important carryover character but solidifying the very essence of Tron: Legacy as a picture that continues on with and pays homage to the look and feel of the original film while also morphing into its own entity both in the series and as a standalone movie. Bridges and Hedlund demonstrate fantastic chemistry; the realism and dynamics of the father-son relationship are both palpable throughout, punctuated by the film's best scene that bridges the gap between the second and third acts and features the son in a candid moment sharing what's happened in the world since his father disappeared some years ago.

Tron: Legacy is a surprisingly wonderful film that got it right on all accounts. It walks that very fine line of staying true to the look and feel of the original Tron while also paving its own way and serving as a showcase of visual effects that are the equal of anything out there today. Even in that light, the film smartly tones things down to stay true to the digital "grid" world as it was first envisioned in 1982. The effects play well with the picture's dark and subdued overlay, and it's made complete by a quality story, a fine script, and great characters. Tron: Legacy isn't a perfect movie; it get bogged down by a few slow stretches and some of the dialogue could use some refinement, but otherwise, it's winner and a worthy followup to a 1980s favorite. Disney's Blu-ray 3D release of Tron: Legacy is superb. Sporting a wonderful 1080p image that seamlessly fluctuates between not only 2D and 3D but its dual aspect ratios; a lossless soundtrack that's every bit the video's equal; and a nice array of 2D-only extras; this release, or better even Disney's ultimate Tron/Tron: Legacy Blu-ray 3D bundle, comes highly recommended.
Cast Notes: Jeff Bridges (Kevin Flynn / Clu), Garrett Hedlund (Sam Flynn), Olivia Wilde (Quorra), Bruce Boxleitner (Alan Bradley / Tron), James Frain (Jarvis), Beau Garrett (Gem), Michael Sheen (Castor / Zuse), Anis Cheurfa (Rinzler), Serinda Swan (Siren #2), Yaya DaCosta (Siren #3), Elizabeth Mathis (Siren #4), Kis Yurij (Half Faced Man [as Yurij Kis]), Conrad Coates (Bartik), Daft Punk (Masked DJ's), Ron Selmour (Chattering Homeless Man).

IMDb Rating (04/04/11): 7.1/10 from 54,559 users

Additional information
Copyright:  2010,  Disney / Buena Vista
Features:  Four-disc set - Blu-ray 3D + Blu-ray + DVD + Digital Copy

Tron: Legacy features a nice assortment of extra content, all of which is found on the included 2D-only Blu-ray disc.
The Next Day: Flynn Lives Revealed (1080p): An entertaining piece that looks at some of the highlight real-world happenings of the Tron universe, particularly as they pertain to what happens following the conclusion of Tron: Legacy. Driven by the "Flynn Lives" fictional movement, ENCOM big shots, hackers, computer users, and others discuss Kevin's disappearance, the effect on the company and the digital world, the greater involvement of Alan Bradley, and the emergence of Sam Flynn as a viable figurehead of and replacement for his father at ENCOM. Once the video segment ends, users are prompted to enter various "high score" initials to view additional video clips that further fill in gaps around the Tron universe. Users may simply type in "All" to view all the segments simultaneously.
Disney Second Screen: Users may download the "Second Screen App" from Disney's website to gain access to interactive features on a PC, Mac, or iPad that play in-sync to the film. A tutorial is also included (1080p, 0:40).
First Look at Tron: Uprising Disney XD Animated Series (1080p, 1:15): An all-too short preview of the new animated series.
Launching the Legacy (1080p, 10:20): A brief overview of how the film came to be, constructed through cast and crew interview clips and a look at the test footage created to sell the film's viability. Comic-Con audience reaction to the short, a few minutes of behind-the-scenes footage, and a glimpse at the science behind the film is also included.
Visualizing Tron (1080p, 11:46): A focused look at the film's production design, examining the importance of light, the work of Director Joseph Kosinski, the ideas behind the story, the evolution of the film's special effects, the combination of practical and digital sets and effects, the unique aspects of the costumes, shooting in 3D, creating a young Jeff Bridges, and more. This is the finest supplement on the disc.
Installing the Cast (1080p, 12:04): A pat-on-the-back piece that looks at the work of the actors.
Disc Roars (1080p, 3:00): Director Joseph Kosinski uses the film's Comic-Con audience to record some of the picture's important crowd ambience sound effects.
Music Video (1080p, 2:58): "Derezzed" written, produced, and performed by Daft Punk.
Digital Copy: Sampled on an iPhone 4, this digital copy appears to nicely preserve the film's blue-gray-black color scheme. Details, too, are solid, and the many dark backgrounds don't often melt into ugly, clumpy blocks. The audio is energetic but a little bit crunchy; sound effects lack clarity, but dialogue is stable and accurate.
DVD Copy.
Subtitles:  English SDH, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Indonesian, Korean, Malay, Mandarin (Simplified), Mandarin (Traditional), Thai, Vietnamese
Video:  Widescreen 1.78:1, 2.35:1 Color
Screen Resolution: 1080p
Audio:  ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1
FRENCH: Dolby Digital 5.1
SPANISH: Dolby Digital 5.1
PORTUGUESE: Dolby Digital 5.1
THAI: Dolby Digital 5.1
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 2.0
Time:  2:05
DVD:  # Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1
UPC:  786936808742
Coding:  [V4.5-A5.0] MPEG-4 AVC
D-Box:  Yes
3-D:  3-D 8/10.
Other:  Directors: Joseph Kosinski; Producers: Sean Bailey, Donald Kushner; Writers: Edward Kitsis, Adam Horowitz; running time of 125 minutes; Packaging: HD Case.

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