Thursday, December 23, 2010

TRON: Legacy


The first TRON, while severely dated as it shows a world of a command-line interface system, manages to remain timeless for its portrayal of how that world would operate. I can watch it now and still find myself dazzled at the workings of the system and the thought put into the physics of it all. Legacy will not live up to its name and provide the same snapshot of its time that its predecessor did. Instead it aims towards loftier themes and the affection of a father-son dynamic.

There is a lot of fun to be had here. That clean, sleek-looking digital environment is thrilling to look at and Daft Punk's score brilliantly provides ample energy and emotion. The light cycles get an appropriate upgrade but overall this universe seems to be more of a throw back to the 1982 TRON world than it is a re-visioning of our current digitally saturated world. Pieces of the universe that were previously assigned a purpose seem to exist now only because we are already familiar with them.

The commentary on technology has been replaced with that of the human existence and finding perfection in the imperfect. In TRON we were given a specific and exhilarating objective for the protagonists to achieve and we watched as they fought for it. But here the ultimate goal is more cloudy and much less grandiose. Too many uncertainties arise in regards to the details of this revamped universe, but as always life is simpler if we just remain ignorant. Though the script doesn't necessarily work, the filmmaking is fairly superb and the final scene offers a nice moment and more literary conclusion than the first film.

The Oscar for Visual Effects has, to me, has always been the most fun and fascinating category as it correlates directly with technological advancements in the industry, but 2009 is a difficult year to top after the game-changer that was "Avatar." TRON: Legacy though seems to be the best contender for the award this year (an achievement the original failed to make) with "Alice in Wonderland" perhaps being the main competition. Beyond this deserved recognition and some likely nods for the sound department (and maybe the score if their lucky?) this movie will not make its mark in history like TRON did.

If there is to be a sequel, as there are plans for one, it needs to be much sooner than 28 years from now or else the superficial thrill will wear off. I'm thinking it already has.

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