I wanted to knock out a review when I saw it and retroactively post the review, but 2011 was a very long time ago and my memory of then and now having just rewatched the movie, my thoughts would be skewed, so...why not just do my reewatch review as I was going to anyway, whether I had previously reviewed it and published it or not. So here it is.
This movie picks up some time after the events of the first movie, and Kevin is famous, runs the company and has a child named Sam. Kevin is telling Sam, as a boy, about 'The Grid' and Tron, his creation and what the grid is like. Kevin rides off and is never heard of again, and is speculated to be lost within the grid. Rebellious Sam, now older, receives a message to go to his dad's old office, only to go there and be digitised and pulled into the very same computer system his father had been rumoured to go missing in, and Sam must now fight for survival just like his father did all them years ago.
So what I do remember about this moving back in 2011, was that it was a huge upgrade from the first movie, everything looked slick and stylish, the special effects were top-notch, but I hated the Clu and the process they do to make an actor look younger. I do not remember if they gave it a term back then, but it was creepy, but maybe that is due to not having the capabilities they have now. The uncanny valley of it all just made it creepy, and I remember leaving the cinema thinking, kinda enjoyable but also very creepy and weird. It just felt forced, so I did not like the movie, although I found elements of it enjoyable, such as the look of it. I may have even said it was rubbish and felt that it was more style than substance. This time around, I enjoyed it.
Watching the second movie after the first, pretty much back-to-back, was great. And although I thought the film was very stylish and slick back then, and still very stylish and slick, how they made the computer world look very modern and that Kevin's programme, Clu still looked creepy, maybe I have seen worst since, gave it a pass or simply got used to it as it did not bother me as much this time around.
I came to realise the limitations of the 80's meant that there always was a Clu in the original film and the deaging technique was not used, but this time around, whilst not upto the standard of film in 2025, I got used to it and for all intents and purposes, fed into the story, so it wasnt as forced as I thought it was all them years ago.
The music is great! Scored by Daft Punk, and they are also in the movie, as essentially, they fit right in. Their scene is shot alongside Michael Sheen and Olivia Wilde before Jeff Bridges turns up. It is essentially a "club" scene that now reminds me of a John Wick club scene. The music laced throughout this movie hits hard and back then, was the unique selling point of the movie, but this time around, still is along with the digital upgrade, but the story isn't as bad upon the rewatch and it is likely the film was given a hard time because of the deaging and the "forced" storyling and Clu element to it, but for me, I've come to realise that the story is about creativity and perfection as sometimes as a creative person, you strive for perfection, but you may not ever know what perfect is, and that was the downfall of Kevin as he wanted perfection, Clu was assisting him with that at any cost and stuck to his programming without evolving.
In the end, Tron: Legacy is a good film. There is a decent story to it, but the film does indeed lack a little depth. The special effects are great and very well stylised and visualised. The new vehicles are excellent, and the way people break down as shattered glass is wonderful to see. The shots are beautiful too. The Grid is a dark yet beautiful place. I just hope that if we do revisit the Grid in Tron: Ares, we get to spend more time there and see what that world has now become. Seeing the first movie isn't necessary to watch this one.
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