Tron: Legacy / The Next Day
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Re: TRON: The Next Day
I SAW it, and didn't have time to ask what it was:
Viral? Fan-film? FlynnLives.com update? DVD bonus-feature clip? Pre-3 hype?
(Any context would be appreciated? )
Viral? Fan-film? FlynnLives.com update? DVD bonus-feature clip? Pre-3 hype?
(Any context would be appreciated? )
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Re: TRON: The Next Day
Spoiler description of the video:
It's rumored that, in addition to the short film, there are other hints sprinkled through out the Blu Ray that they are laying the ground works for a third film. It is said that they contain the following:
I'll say this... My friend and I sooo cannot wait for Comic Con.
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Re: TRON: The Next Day
Is anyone from DC animation working on this?
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Re: TRON: The Next Day
I believe it's Uprising you are referring to, not Next Day.
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Thanks for the new link!
It's a bit "direct to video", but intriguing, and good to see original cast members involved in obviously new footage. Not quite sure what this was saying (in parts it's like a backstory between Tron and Tron: Legacy, at others it seems to follow on from Legacy), but it was pretty cool. Dillinger Jr is obviously going to have a part to play in any upcoming installments...
It's a bit "direct to video", but intriguing, and good to see original cast members involved in obviously new footage. Not quite sure what this was saying (in parts it's like a backstory between Tron and Tron: Legacy, at others it seems to follow on from Legacy), but it was pretty cool. Dillinger Jr is obviously going to have a part to play in any upcoming installments...
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Re: TRON: The Next Day
Make sure you have your speakers on when playing this.
Once again, hidden as a spoiler for those who have not seen Legacy.
Once again, hidden as a spoiler for those who have not seen Legacy.
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Re: TRON: The Next Day
Here it is again, but view it quickly. Remember, make sure sound is on.
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Re: TRON: The Next Day
Obviously the clip sets up the stage for what part three will be like and who the antagonists will be.
Here's how I look at it:
Here's how I look at it:
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Re: Tron: Legacy
Just read the review on the main page. Great read.
However, in regards to your commenting on the summer of '82, I thought Poltergeist (thanks to Spielberg's name atop the poster) also found an audience that summer.* Or, at least, I was under the impression it was a notable hit, even if not coming close to the success of E.T.
Of course, The Secret of NIMH might be one of the most infamous flops of that summer that was helped by home video and Spielberg's latter endorsement of Don Bluth, but now I'm getting off-topic here.
*Along with Star Trek II, whose big success among non-Trekkers probably helped there to be more Enterprise adventures.
However, in regards to your commenting on the summer of '82, I thought Poltergeist (thanks to Spielberg's name atop the poster) also found an audience that summer.* Or, at least, I was under the impression it was a notable hit, even if not coming close to the success of E.T.
Of course, The Secret of NIMH might be one of the most infamous flops of that summer that was helped by home video and Spielberg's latter endorsement of Don Bluth, but now I'm getting off-topic here.
*Along with Star Trek II, whose big success among non-Trekkers probably helped there to be more Enterprise adventures.
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Accdg. to BoxOfficeMojo, the biggest hits of Summer '82 were:
It wasn't the "genre" that flopped, it was just the more memorable entries that year:
Blade Runner was too obscure, Road Warrior was too out there (and had funny accents), The Thing was too icky, Conan was too pretentious and R-rated for the kids who wanted to see it, NIMH was just starting to get by on word of mouth (but this was the point in the 80's where animation was dying in a Care Bears ghetto), Dark Crystal wasn't till Christmas, Annie was such a misfire that the studio ended up promoting it as "the Carol Burnett movie", and Tron had hyped itself up to be the "Pac-Man: the Movie" that it wasn't.
Porky's, Mr. T, and Richard Gere carrying out girls certainly haven't aged well, but just try and get audiences away from them at the time.
(And FWIW, Grease 2 writer Ken Finkleman that same year went on to write/direct one of '82's more unfairly overlooked guilty pleasures, "Airplane II: the Sequel".)
It was '82: There was just too much competition.1) ET - $359M
2) An Officer & a Gentleman - $129M
3) Rocky III - $124M
4) Porky's - $105M
5) Star Trek II:tWoK - $78M
6) Poltergeist - $76M
It wasn't the "genre" that flopped, it was just the more memorable entries that year:
Blade Runner was too obscure, Road Warrior was too out there (and had funny accents), The Thing was too icky, Conan was too pretentious and R-rated for the kids who wanted to see it, NIMH was just starting to get by on word of mouth (but this was the point in the 80's where animation was dying in a Care Bears ghetto), Dark Crystal wasn't till Christmas, Annie was such a misfire that the studio ended up promoting it as "the Carol Burnett movie", and Tron had hyped itself up to be the "Pac-Man: the Movie" that it wasn't.
Porky's, Mr. T, and Richard Gere carrying out girls certainly haven't aged well, but just try and get audiences away from them at the time.
(And FWIW, Grease 2 writer Ken Finkleman that same year went on to write/direct one of '82's more unfairly overlooked guilty pleasures, "Airplane II: the Sequel".)
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Weeeeeellllllll...if you want to get finicky about it!
Thanks for the kind words on my review, Estafan, and you're right that Poltergeist was a notable success - but of course I was trying to make an argument for how Tron has been perceived over the years and so chose the titles I used carefully. As you saw, I didn't include Trek II or NIMH because they did find audiences (NIMH got a better reception in Europe than the US as I remember) but I also wanted to include genre-type films that people had heard of to illustrate the point. So while Poltergeist did make money, it wasn't a huge smash and I figured I'd run it in my grouping of 1982 also-rans (again, it wasn't until the home video release that MGM greenlit Poltergeist II, notably without Spielberg, who didn't feel the film's box office warranted a second one).
Eric...I agree on Airplane II, and think it's every bit as funny as the original, with some gags hitting the bullseye even more so. And when you think Finkleman was working on his own as opposed to a gang of three, he did a pretty darn good job that gets overlooked by too man (or disregarded by that gang of three who may have been, well, a little jealous?).
Thanks for the kind words on my review, Estafan, and you're right that Poltergeist was a notable success - but of course I was trying to make an argument for how Tron has been perceived over the years and so chose the titles I used carefully. As you saw, I didn't include Trek II or NIMH because they did find audiences (NIMH got a better reception in Europe than the US as I remember) but I also wanted to include genre-type films that people had heard of to illustrate the point. So while Poltergeist did make money, it wasn't a huge smash and I figured I'd run it in my grouping of 1982 also-rans (again, it wasn't until the home video release that MGM greenlit Poltergeist II, notably without Spielberg, who didn't feel the film's box office warranted a second one).
Eric...I agree on Airplane II, and think it's every bit as funny as the original, with some gags hitting the bullseye even more so. And when you think Finkleman was working on his own as opposed to a gang of three, he did a pretty darn good job that gets overlooked by too man (or disregarded by that gang of three who may have been, well, a little jealous?).