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Interview with Tron Creator Steven Lisberger

NeoCode writes "AintItCool has posted an interesting interview with the Tron creator Steven Lisberger. He doesn't talk much about the sequel Tron 2.0 (because of a Disney gag order) but he reflects about the original movie with nostalgia. He talks about what influenced Tron and what Tron meant (and still does) to people. Have a read."

9 of 205 comments (clear)

  1. Misnamed sequel... by Gorm+the+DBA · · Score: 5, Funny

    They really should call the sequel TROFF... or perhaps I need to get back on the medications.

  2. Tron 2? by Lxy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why do we need a sequel?

    Tron was awesome because it wowed the audience with its technical advances. In these days with the Matrix and Star Wars and the like, technology isn't as thrilling. Sure, we like to see Pixar's next film, as they continually create more stunning characters and produce each sequential film is less time. That's cool. But it's not the drop-everything-OH-MY-GOD-let's-go-see-this film that Tron was.

    Of course I'll go see it. I think that's a requirement of being a registered linux user, right? my point is that there are some films that had their day, still have their day, and should just be left alone. Tron is one of them.

    --

    There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
    :wq
  3. horrible interviewer. by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First he states the tron is the best, then later asks: "Remind me. What was the Bit? "
    not really much of a tron fan.

    then its?: I know you can't talk about tron 2, so here is a bunch of questions about tron 2...

    blech.
    Can /. do a 10 questions?

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  4. Obligatory Quote by daeley · · Score: 4, Funny

    Eisner: What kind of consumer is he?

    Ghost of Disney: He's not any kind of consumer, Eisner. He's a geek.

    Eisner: A geek?!

    GoD: What's the matter, Eisner? You look nervous.

    Eisner: Geeks... well, I mean... geeks wrote us. A geek even wrote you!

    GoD: No one geek wrote me! I'm worth millions of their geek-years!

    --
    I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
  5. Tron 2.0 ?? by TheKubrix · · Score: 4, Informative

    I could be wrong but I believe it's called Tron Killer App

  6. What's up with the gag order? by jonman_d · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What's with this Disney gag order? I mean, come on! I, for one, would be more inclined to spend the $10 to see the movie if I had been able to read more about it from this interview.

    Why must they do that?

    1. Re:What's up with the gag order? by Schnapple · · Score: 4, Informative
      What's with this Disney gag order?
      A few things, really. First, TRON 2.0 is really early into production, so no use in putting information out there that's potentially wrong. Second, lack of information at early stages makes for more tension and hype. But really part of it has to be based off of the idea that Disney may well pull the plug on the whole thing. A TRON sequel has been in the talking/development hell stages for years and years now.

      Monolith wanted their upcoming TRON 2.0 game to be based off of the sequel, but after waiting so long they gave up and persued (and won) the right to do up TRON 2.0 as a game, regardless of if the movie is made. Oddly enough, it looks like all the hype the game has created has made Disney more anxious to work on the movie, which is why we're hearing more and more about it.

  7. Tron - blech by Animats · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Tron was a box office bomb. Some people in the industry said it set the adoption of CG in Hollywood back ten years.

    In fact, much of the "CG" in Tron was hand-animated by some outsourced firm in Asia. The first movie to have "realistic CGI" was The Last Starfighter, with 27 minutes of CGI. Tron, except for the "light cycle" scene, did not have significant CGI.

    Read this history of the field.

  8. Crypto biblical deal creeps me out by sam_handelman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Of course, as it turns out, it's very funny.

    At the time, the whole millenialist rigamarole, with computers serving as the mark of the beast, had not permeated popular culture.

    Then, in this silly movie there are computer programs which get died red in order to show their obsequious obedience to antichrist, I mean to the Master Control Program.

    It's an amusing transposition - much more amusing than it was at the time (oh, the commie/atheist/roman computer programs are forcing the christian computer programs to fight in gladiatorial games,) since computers themselves have had a lot of PR as instruments of Satan since then.

    Q: Moby's live show has a grand finale where he takes a beam of light to the head and arcs his arm in a similar fashion to the grand finale of Tron... A: ... Anytime a work like this can go from one generation to the next, it means something ...

    Moby was born in 1965. He's 38 years old. Come on.

    --
    The good and new comes from no quarter where it is looked for, and is always something different from what is expected.