Tag Archive | "Tron Legacy"

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Hedlund Heading Back To The System For TRON 3

Posted on 13 December 2012 by Rich Drees

Garrett Hedlund has confirmed that he will be making a return trip to the world inside a computer in TRON 3. That’s probably not a big surprise, though, considering that when he signed on for the role of Sam Flynn for 2010′s TRON: Legacy there was probably a contract clause covering potential sequels.

The sequel just recently gained a screenwriter in Jesse Wigutow and it is looking as if the project goes forward it will be in front of cameras sometime in 2014. TRON: Legacy director Joseph Kosinski is currently set to return to direct the new sequel.

In the 2010 film Hedlund played Sam Flynn, the son of the original 1982 TRON‘s hero Kevin Flynn, played by Jeff Bridges. Legacy ended with Sam escaping from the cyberworld inside a computer system, bringing the anthropomorphized computer program Quora (Olivia Wilde) with him back to the real world. Presumably the new film will pick up from this point and explore the ramifications of that.

Via Next Movie.

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Disney Moves Forward On TRON 3 By Hiring Screenwriter

Posted on 08 June 2011 by Rich Drees

After lots of speculation from cast, crew and fans, Disney is finally moving forward on a sequel to last winter’s TRON: Legacy, itself a sequel to the studio’s groundbreaking 1982 science-fiction adventure TRON. The studio has announced that they have hired screenwriter David DiGilio to begin work on a third installment in the franchise.

If Disney has seemed to be slow in moving forward on a sequel to last winter’s TRON: Legacy, it is not without good reason. In most cases, the $400 million gross TRON: Legacy pulled at the worldwide box office would be an automatic trigger for development of a sequel. But TRON: Legacy is not most cases. It was a fairly expensive film, budgeted at $170 million, plus it had a massive advertising campaign and years of development costs it needed to recoup as well. This leaves TRON: Legacy a more modest hit than one would normally assume.

The Hollywood Reporter, who broke the news of DiGilio’s hiring, has been told that the studio is actually of leery of moving forward too quickly on a theatrical sequel until it sees how well its animated spinoff TRON: Uprising performs on their Disney DX cable outlet. The show, which is set between the first and second TRON films for you continuity geeks, will feature the voices of Elijah Wood, Emmanuelle Chriqui, Lance Henriksen and TRON star Bruce Boxleitner and is set to premier next year.

But who is David DiGilio? Worryingly, the only produced feature on his resume is the dog movie Eight Below. However, he reportedly is a graduate of Disney’s writers program and has just recently sold a science-fiction series pitch to Showtime called Last H.O.P.E., so there is at least reason to be cautiously optimistic.

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Sneak Peek At The New TRON Short Film

Posted on 14 March 2011 by Rich Drees

This past weekend, a new bit of TRON: Legacy video showed up online. Called “TRON: The Next Day,” the video connects some dots and fills in backstory of what happened between the original 1982 TRON and the new film far better than TRON: Legacy managed to do and shows us a bit more of the “Flynn Lives” movement. Not just some random bit of viral marketing, the short presents a couple of surprises that sheds new light on a few things we thought we knew about what happened in the two decades between films. (Now if they can just get Cindy Morgan back as Lori…) It also serves as a bit of an epilogue to Legacy and may even be teasing some possible plot points for an as-yet-not-officially announced third film.

This short film will be part of the upcoming TRON: Legacy Blu-ray hitting stores on April 5.

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Possible Original TRON Blu-Ray Art?

Posted on 12 January 2011 by Rich Drees

In the weeks leading up to the release of TRON: Legacy, people started to wonder why Disney was keeping the 1982 original TRON out of sight of today’s audiences, perhaps fearful of people reacting negatively to what they perceived as dated special effect work. In reality, Disney was probably holding off a release in order to bring it back out on home video in conjunction with TRON: Legacy.

While Disney still hasn’t officially confirmed a release date for TRON on on blu-ray, some alleged cover art has surfaced today. And I have to say, I’m not terribly impressed with it. Personally, I would hope that they would go with the original 1982 poster art. It’s striking and iconic enough that Disney echoed it with one of their poster designs for the new film. If anything, it would help visually tie the two products together. But for the meantime, take the below cover art as rumor.

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Tracking TRON: LEGACY’s Box Office Chances And The Dangers Of The Blockbuster

Posted on 01 December 2010 by Rich Drees

Is Disney’s Tron: Legacy going to be a hit or a miss? That’s the question being posed by several box office tracking firms, who are projecting that the film may just be a miss, possibly pulling as low as a $35 million weekend box office take when it opens on December 17.  Given that estimates of the film’s budget have gone north of the $200 million mark, TRON: Legacy would have to earn at least $50 million its opening weekend in order to break even.

Of course, this just based on some preliminary surveys, so the $35 million figure may not hold much water. Also, it should probably be pointed out that Disney’s take on the Rapunzel fairy tale, Tangled, was only projected to earn in the neighborhood of $40 million it’s opening weekend last week, but pulled closer to $69 million. Given that TRON: Legacy is set to open on IMAX and 3D screens as well in addition to traditional 2D screens, that $35 million figure feels exceptionally low when one factors in the ticket price bumps for those venues. I think it might be fair to say that box office tracking is not always an exact science.

Box office tracking figures are often arrived at through surveys taken which gage a “typical” potential moviegoer’s awareness of and desire to see certain films. I find it hard to believe that with the amount of promotion that Disney has done for the flick in the last several weeks that there aren’t too many people who aren’t at least marginally aware of the film’s upcoming release.

Now granted, as a film blogger, I am probably an atypical moviegoer. I’ve been following the progress of this film since it was just a faint whispered rumor on the breeze several years ago and have been looking forward to seeing what director Joseph Kosinski has up his sleeve with this film. I’m also of the age to have seen the original TRON in theaters as a boy and for it to great a lasting impression which is helping to fuel my enthusiasm. But then again, there were lots of twelve-year-olds like me who saw TRON in the theaters and on video in the past 28 years and I would imagine that there is a significant number of them are also looking forward to a return visit to the cyberspace world inside of computers that the first film introduced us to.

Walt Disney Pictures is banking more than just the estimated $200 million spent on the film’s production that it will be a hit. They already have a sequel in development as well as plans for an animated series and theme park attractions. If TRON: Legacy tanks, it loses not only all the money it spent of production and promotion for the film, but also all development costs for these already in the pipeline follow-up projects, a potentially huge write-off.

What this leaves us with, is an illustration of the dangers that have come from the corporate blockbuster mentality. In the Golden Age of Hollywood, studios constantly churned out product for a movie-hungry audience. If a couple of films underperformed, the studio had plenty of more product on the way that would make up those losses.

But these days, things are different. The collapse of the studio system and the rise of the talent agency system leaves us with studios financially unable to produce films in the quantity that they did in the 1930s through the 50s. And less product means greater risk. Studios are unable to offset the cost of a few bad films with the profits of a couple of successful films anymore, as the number of films they have to even out such profits and losses has dramatically shrunk. By placing all of their eggs in just a couple of baskets, studios are taking greater and greater gambles on their very own survival. This problem is only compounded within vertically integrated companies like Disney, who hope that a film like TRON: Legacy is a hit so they can launch numerous related projects across its various corporate components such as television and theme parks. How much of Disney’s projected future corporate earnings are based on their expectations of how successful TRON will be?

Now I’m sure that Disney is a big enough company to absorb any red ink TRON: Legacy may spill on the overall balance sheet. I certainly don’t think that things will get as bad for Disney as they did for United Artists back in 1980 when Michael Cimino’s Heaven’s Gate bankrupted the studio. But the possibility is always there for some other studios. It only took a couple of bad films to place MGM into the financial straits it is currently trapped in.

And a poor TRON: Legacy box office performance also begs the question as to what will happen to some of the other big budget projects currently in development. Will the studio look at scaling back its financial commitment to Kosinski’s planned remake of The Black Hole or David Fincher’s new take on 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea? I certainly hope not, as these projects look to be far more interesting family film fare than some of the other upcoming films from other studios like live-action/CGI hybrids The Smurfs and Yogi Bear.

Via The Hollywood Reporter.

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Nokia’s TRON:LEGACY Viral Trailer

Posted on 29 November 2010 by Rich Drees

I generally don’t have the time to devote to play any of those viral marketing games that studios seem to like to use to promote an upcoming film. If you’re like me, you really appreciate it when someone else does the work and then shares the results. So since somebody else has done the work, we’re passing along the results to you. Hope you appreciate it.

There’s not much in the terms of new footage in the clip. And what little there is contains some product placement for, what else, Nokia Phones!

So does Nokia have an app for this?

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Final TRON: LEGACY Trailer Pushes Plot

Posted on 09 November 2010 by Rich Drees

So far, Disney’s trailers for the upcoming TRON: Legacy seem to have been aimed more towards fans of the original 1982 film, preaching to the choir as it were. But if you’re someone who has never seen the first film, and shame on you for that, this new trailer gives you a bit of an idea of what to expect when the film hits theaters on December 17.

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Comic-Con News Roundup: Thursday

Posted on 23 July 2010 by William Gatevackes

So, San Diego Comic-Con is once again upon us, and they are not waiting until the convention hits the big days of Friday and Saturday to give us breaking news and inside scoop. Here is some of the news to come out of Thursday.

ITEM!: We have already mentioned the debut of the new Tron: Legacy trailer. It will be interesting to see how this film will fare now that the technology in real life has caught up to what was on the screen.

ITEM!: TheOne-Ring.net panel gave us news supposedly from Peter jackson’s mouth–The Hobbit will not be shot in 3-D. That is, of course, if the film ever gets made and if Peter Jackson has anything to do with it.

ITEM!: At the Entertainment Weekly: The Visionaries panel focusing on him and J.J. Abrams, Joss Whedon confirmed he was directing The Avengers.  ”That is not an official thing. But I’m making that an official thing: I’m directing the Avengers,” said Whedon. It’s so charming that Marvel thought they’d get some buzz and excitement out of news that was pretty much common knowledge.

ITEM!: Guillermo Del Toro announced that he is going to “reimagine” The Haunted Mansion for a new film. Glad to see that Disney is jumping aboard the whole “if at first you don’t succeed, try again” trend in films. Although, if there is a director who can get the most out of a kid-friendly horror property (no pun intended), it’s Del Toro.

More news from Friday either later today or tomorrow.

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Trailer: TRON LEGACY

Posted on 23 July 2010 by Rich Drees

Two years ago at the San Diego Comic Con, Disney presented some test footage of effects work for a possible sequel to their 1982 cult favorite Tron to gauge whether their would be interest in a sequel. The overwhelmingly positive reaction convinced the studio that they should go ahead with the long gestating project. Last year at the con, Disney rereleased the test footage, now with a bit of polish added to it, as way of announcing the Tron sequel’s full title Tron Legacy.

Yesterday at SDCC, Disney screened a completed scene for attendees. But for those not able to attend the show, they have also released a new trailer more action in the film’s inside a computer setting.

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Scans From EW’s Comic-Con Issue: GL, THOR, PAUL

Posted on 15 July 2010 by William Gatevackes

Even though, optimistically, the issue probably won’t be on stands until tomorrow at the earliest, some subscribers to Entertainment Weekly received the previously mentioned Comic-Con issue today. I am one of those subscribers. And as a service to the FBOL readership, I have scanned some images of interest

Some points of note:

1. These are not high-quality scans. These are the best you can hope for with a scanner available to the general public scanning printed material. If you want better quality images, I strongly recommend that you go out and purchase the issue.

2. These images are trademark and copyright Entertainment Weekly and the originating studios. We here at FBOL do not own these images and would never claim to.

3. This is just a small sampling of the items inside the issue. They cover everything from Zack Snyder’s Sucker Punch to Tron Legacy to Red. It’s recommended to all who are interested in these films and more of their ilk.

Now the images (Click on images for larger views):

The main article in the magazine is on Green Lantern. We get a peek of Blake Lively as Carol Ferris, Peter Sarsgaard as Hector Hammond–both before and after transformation, Angela Bassett as Amanda Waller, and Tim Robbins as Senator Hammond. We even get a sneak peek at Abin Sur.

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Next up is one image from Thor with Thor and Odin having a heart to heart:

Finally, a picture from Paul, where a scene actually takes place at Comic-Con. This image isn’t that scene, I would assume.

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