TRON movie
Formats Detail
DivX
| Video Codec | mpeg4 |
| Resolution | 720x304 |
| Video Bitrate | 1869kb |
| Audio Codec | ac3 |
| Audio Channels | 1 |
| Audio Bitrate | 256kb |
| FPS | 23980 |
| File Size | 1573 Mb |
| Preview File Size | 22 Mb |
| Language | en |
| Download in DivX format | |
iPod
| Video Codec | h264 |
| Resolution | 640x270 |
| Video Bitrate | 1565kb |
| Audio Codec | aac |
| Audio Channels | 1 |
| Audio Bitrate | 151kb |
| FPS | 23980 |
| File Size | 1321 Mb |
| Preview File Size | 55 Mb |
| Language | en |
| Download in iPod format | |
el_monty_BCN from Barcelona, Spain
Visually, it's stunning. Narratively, a clunker.
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
First of all, know this: if you think you will ever want to see Tron
Legacy, even if you have no more than a passing interest, then I urge
you to do it at the cinema. It is a breathtaking visual spectacle of
the highest magnitude, in the category of Avatar, and this being the
greatest strength it has to offer, you will be certainly missing out if
you leave it for the DVD. Narratively, however, it's a disappointment.
It's sketchy, chaotic and unsatisfying. It's not like the original
could boast the strongest or most coherent of screenplays, true, but it
got by on its originality, its zippy energy, its humour and its
wide-eyed naivety. This sequel, inflated with grandiosity, too somber
and overambitious, has none of those things. And you get the feeling
that the plot is just a mishmash of half-baked ideas. I found it quite
baffling and disappointing, for example, that Cillian Murphy (probably
the second most famous actor in the entire cast!) made a
blink-and-you'll-miss-it appearance at the beginning as Dillinger's
son, no less, and then never showed up again! And there are a couple of
important details about it that struck me as particularly wrong and at
certain times almost threw me off the story completely: one, Michael
Sheen, who is an actor I admire but whose absurd histrionics here were
absolutely, completely out of place; and two, the rendering of the
young Jeff Bridges is simply not life-like enough (even if he is not
actually supposed to be a "human", other "programs" around him,
starting with Olivia Wilde and Beau Garrett in their slinky outfits,
certainly look and feel human enough!). The technology is not quite
there yet, I'm afraid. It is one thing to be able to integrate a
non-human character like Gollum in a live-action film and make it work,
but a we, as humans, have a very fine-tuned perception of what another
human is supposed to look like (and especially a famous one like
Bridges) in a real environment, and computers still can't trick us that
far.