Revisiting TRON
I was 12 when Tron came out in '82. At the time, I remember there was quite a lot of publicity talking about its revolutionary computer generated imagery. Of course, the CGI comprises only a few moments of the entire film, the rest being made up of traditional animation, but it's all blended seamlessly to create this odd cyberworld. Also admirable is Wendy Carlos' futuristic synth score. However, my 12 year old mentality couldn't embrace the film despite its unique look. I simply found it no fun, with characters I could care less about. Revisiting the film 34 years later, I still maintain the film looks fantastic and you can be knocked out in admiration for its production design and special effects, but the story continues to leave me cold despite the fact it is far less confusing since the technobabble used by the characters has now become commonplace. Steve Lisberger--who not only wrote and directed it, but supervised the computer imagery--had a perfect plan for how he wanted Tron to look, but his writing abilities pale in comparison. The battle sequences (such as the Lightcycle contest) are thrilling to watch, but I just don't give a damn about the characters. There is no sense of elation at Tron's triumph at the end and Bruce Boxleitner has no charisma in the role, nor is there the slightest bit of romantic chemistry between Cindy Morgan and Jeff Bridges. The only actor whom I enjoyed was the always reliable David Warner, who lights up any movie he's in. Since he's playing a heavy, this gives Warner an opportunity to slip in a bit of hamminess in such unintentionally hilarious lines like "Bring me the logic probe!" I look at Tron and see a film I can admire for doing things that had never been done before and especially given the limitations of the technology in '82. However, Lisberger's script remains a disaster and I'm rather surprised Disney executives didn't intervene by hiring a professional screenwriter to punch up the script. They must have really trusted Lisberger's vision. I admire Tron far more than Tron: Legacy because the latter is emerging from an era in which sophisticated CGI is now so commonplace that we take it for granted. Tron truly was a pioneering effort. As a side bit of trivia: I believe three different computer effects companies worked on the CGI in Tron, one of which was Triple I, whose work can be seen a full year before Tron in Michael Creighton's Looker--a terrible thriller that nevertheless has some interesting ideas in it. There is an entire breathtaking computer topographic scan of Susan Dey set to Vivaldi's Flute Concerto that probably ranks as the first time these effects had been seen in a movie and deserves its rightful place alongside Tron for usage of groundbreaking CGI.
share