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Charles Skaggs & Xan Sprouse watch Tron, the 1982 science fiction action-adventure film directed by Steven Lisberger, featuring Jeff Bridges as Kevin Flynn/Clu, Bruce Boxleitner as Alan Bradley/Tron, and David Warner as Edward Dillinger/Sark/MCP! Find us here:X/Twitter: @DrunkCinemaCast, @CharlesSkaggs, @udanax19 Facebook: @DrunkCinema Bluesky: @charlesskaggs.bsky.social, @udanax19.bsky.social Email: DrunkCinemaPodcast@gmail.com Listen and subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts and leave us a review!
Welcome to Cyberpunk Cinema – the Definitive Dive into the Dark Future of Science Fiction. I am your host, Anthony La Pira, and I will be taking you on a cinematic journey through the sprawling cityscapes, the crippling datastorms, and the cybernetic implants that encompass all things Cyberpunk.In this week's episode, I will be breaking-down the ground-breaking 1982 cyberpunk movie, Tron – written and directed by Steven Lisberger, starring Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner, David Warner, Cindy Morgan, and Barnard Hughes.A computer hacker is abducted into the digital world and forced to participate in gladiatorial games where his only chance of escape is with the help of a heroic security program.This is one of the first cyberpunk films I remember watching as a little kid. I remember being dazzled by the otherworldly raw special effects of cyberspace, thinking about how cool it would be to be zapped into my favorite video game (I always wanted to be in Space Quest and travel the universe with Roger Wilco and the Pirates of Pestulon). Tron was one of the landmark 1982 cyberpunk films along with Blade Runner, Burst City, and Liquid Sky. So, do me a favor – it's time to access your cranial jacks, boot up your Ono-Sendai Cyberspace 7, and slap on your damn mirror-shades. You know what time it is! Cyberpunk Cinema starts…now!Anthony's IG - https://www.instagram.com/stormgiantproductionsCyberpunk Cinema IG - https://www.instagram.com/cyberpunk.cinemaSignal Fragment SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/signalfragmentSend us a Text Message.
A computer programmer gets sucked into the mainframe of his former employer and does battle with a malevolent artificial intelligence in a futuristic world right out of a black-light poster. One of Walt Disney Pictures' better forays into science fiction brings us a visually-dazzling world, but that doesn't quite make up for a story that's both nonsensical and a bit of a slog. Starring Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner, David Warner, Cindy Morgan, and Barnard Hughes. Written by Steven Lisberger and Bonnie MacBird. Directed by Steven Lisberger. Music by Wendy Carlos.
Two years before William Gibson's novel Neuromancer coined the term “cyberspace” the Disney corporation unleashed a bold and daring vision of anthropomorphic distributed computing gone wild. Featuring a young and wildly talented Jeff Bridges, and more dance belts and BMX armor than you can shake a data disc at, Steven Lisberger's ground-breaking proto-CGI extravaganza, Tron, is a bizarre and beautiful vision of a future that never came to pass! Join Javi, Paul, and - needless to say - Producer Dumont as they get digitized into the gaming grid to marvel at Syd Mead's generation-defining production design, do battle with the nefarious Master Control Program, and struggle to make sense of the movie's plot!
Greetings programs. We continue our journey through cyberspace today with Steven Lisberger's TRON! Was one of the most groundbreaking digital effects films drawn by hand? Enter the Grid with us to uncover the ambition, tedium, and digital frisbees that made TRON a cyberpunk touchstone.Next week, we cover Terry Gilliam's BRAZIL (1985). Join the conversation on Eye of the Discord at https://discord.com/invite/RssDc3brsxAlso, listeners who join the Discord can enter our very first Blu-Ray Corner Giveaway for a chance to win a rare, out-of-print GHOST IN THE SHELL 4K steelbook! The sweepstakes starts on Monday, Jan 22. See you there!References:Special FeaturesThe TRON PhenomenonPhoto TronologyOriginal DVD FeaturesThe Making of TRONVideo Game Player VFX BreakdownThe Guardian TRON Production HistoryFilm School Rejects Costume BreakdownVariety TRON 35th AnniversaryDen of Geek Justin Springer and Steven Lisberger InterviewMoving Innovation: A History of Computer Animation By Tom SitoThe Guardian Wendy Carlos Write-Uphttps://ohiostate.pressbooks.pub/graphicshistory/chapter/14-3-tron/#:~:text=Because%20of%20the%20amount%20of,(MAGI)%2C%20and%20Information%20InternationalCredits:Eye of the Duck is created, hosted, and produced by Dom Nero and Adam Volerich.This episode was edited by Erik Gunnarsson.This episode was researched by Parth Marathe.Our logo was designed by Francesca Volerich. You can purchase her work at francescavolerich.com/shopThe "Adam's Blu-Ray Corner" theme was produced by Chase Sterling.This miniseries was programmed with the help of Nik Long.Follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and Letterboxd or join the conversation at Eye of the DiscordSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Classico della fantascienza anni '80, il film "Tron" diretto da Steven Lisberger è stato uno dei primi a esplorare il concetto di realtà virtuale portando gli spettatori in un viaggio straordinario dentro i circuiti elettronici di un computer. Insieme a Fabio "Wolf" Gorini e Luca Antoniazzi analizziamo l'impatto di Tron sul mondo del cinema di fantascienza con accenni anche al sequel, "Tron Legacy," uscito nel 2010, un film che ha continuato a esplorare il mondo digitale con tecnologie ancora più avanzate. E dopo la puntata non perdere lo speciale dedicato alle musiche di "Tron" e "Tron Legacy" che puoi ascoltare sul podcast "Cinescore le musiche nel cinema". FEED RSS: https://anchor.fm/s/e8b73778/podcast/rss Spotify: https://goo.by/mHApwF Apple Podcast: https://goo.by/aWLxWt Amazon Music: https://goo.by/mNGefT
56º FESTIVAL INTERNACIONAL DE CINE FANTÁSTICO DE CATALUÑA Welcome to Sitges 2023!!! Hacemos un recorrido por todo lo que ha dado este festival. Esperad al final, un pequeño análisis de Tron (1982) de Steven Lisberger. Equipo Maniático: Albert San (Mr. Maniático), Naila Knight, Miguel y Montse Vela. Intro Musical "1983 Main Titles" Album Beyond the Black Rainbow (2014) by Sinoia Caves Tomb for Two (2013) Album by Lebanon Hanover "Tweet Tweet Tweet" Song (2014) Album Divide and Exit by Sleaford Mods Tonight She Comes (2018) Album by Wojciech Golczewski Blossoms in Red (2015) Album by Ensemble Economique Next of Kin (1982) Album by Klaus Schulze Outro Musical Phantasm - Theme [Extended & Remastered by Gilles Nuytens]
Today, one of our loyal listeners (Andrew Gow) has suggested we rate and review Tron - which was written/directed by Steven Lisberger and stars Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner and David Warner.Do you fancy having your review read out on the pod or have a film that you would like us to watch and review? Then get in touch below...email : offradarpod@gmail.comTwitter : @OffRadarPodcastFacebook: facebook.com/offradarpodPlease review, share and subscribe and for exclusive trailers and additional video content subscribe to our YouTube channel.Site : http://offradar.buzzsprout.comApple : http://bit.ly/offradarSpotify : http://spoti.fi/2YMS3EcYouTube : youtube.com/channel/UCl9TAOcagnCNr2OFI5GPVfAThanks for listening,LOVE James, James and Nige.Support the show
The visionary writer-director of 1982's TRON reveals how he brought all those Light Cycles, Solar Sailors and glowing neon circuitry to life.
"A world inside the computer where man has never been. Never before now." In this week's episode, we discuss the ground breaking special effects Sci-Fi cult classic 'Tron' starring Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner, Cindy Morgan and David Warner. Written and directed by Steven Lisberger.Tron - IMDB: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084827/?ref_=tttg_ov Tron - Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/tronBill's Letterboxd Ratings: https://letterboxd.com/bill_b/list/bills-all-80s-movies-podcast-ratings/Jason's Letterboxd Ratings: https://letterboxd.com/jasonmasek/list/jasons-all-80s-movies-podcast-ratings/Website: http://www.all80smoviespodcast.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/podcastAll80sFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100030791216864TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@all80smoviespodcast
Before Mario…before Sonic…there was…Tron! Steven Lisberger's film — inspired by his observations of Pong — used groundbreaking effects to transport Jeff Bridges to a digital world. Decades later, Joseph Kosinski would make his directorial debut with the sequel. Christian and Scott are finally watching a movie created for cinemas, and not adapted from video games themselves. Will it hold up to the fun of adapting beloved characters? Have a video game movie you want us to covert his month? Send us an email to cinemadrippodcast@gmail.com Intro| 0:00 - 2:44, Tron?| 2:44 - 10:21, The Review| 10:21 - 56:38, Awards| 56:38 - 1:02:12, Closing Thoughts and Looking Ahead| 1:02:12 - 1:05:25
We review Tron (1982) on The Atomic Cinema Experiment. This is a sci fi movie podcast. Tron is directed by Steven Lisberger and stars Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner, David Warner, Cindy Morgan patreon: https://www.patreon.com/mildfuzztv twitter: https://twitter.com/Mild_Fuzz discord: https://discord.gg/8fbyCehMTy TWITCH: https://www.twitch.tv/mildfuzztv Email: mftvquestions@gmail.com Audio version: https://the-ace-atomic-cinema-experime.pinecast.co
This episode exists because last December, my best friend Dakota messaged me a picture of a platinum blond, bearded, trench-coat donning BADASS Mark Hamill. He followed the pic with "do this review!" Challenge accepted. So here, we have SLIPSTREAM, a 1989 venture from Steven Lisberger (best known for directing 1982's TRON), about a post-apocalyptic future where nature's revenge on humanity's pollution has led to earthquakes, floods and an uncontrollable river of wind called the Slipstream. In this world, a man accused of murder (Bob Peck) is chased by two bounty hunters (Mark Hamill & Kitty Aldridge). When a ne'erdowell scrapper (Bill Paxton) hijacks the bounty from the couple, he finds himself bonding with the accused, learning secrets and embarking on a grand adventure through the wastelands, skysurfing the Slipstream. Did I mention we also get Ben Kingsley, F. Murray Abraham & Robbie Coltrane (motherfucking HAGRID) in this?! This reads a lot cooler than the movie, which feels like a DUNE-sized saga crammed into 90 minutes. I should have David Rosen (of the awesome Piecing It Together podcast) dissect every influence imaginable in this thing: STAR WARS, BLADE RUNNER...hell, I know WATERWORLD came out in '95, but this feels like a cousin. The world never feels fully realized; The piece about explaining humanity through its most basic essence comes almost as an afterthought to the chase; The characters are paper-thin, while spouting dialogue that should be left in Chapter 3, not damn near the end of the movie. It exemplifies the kind of film that seems to throw its budget to the wind and hopes it'll all find its way. Maybe in that sense, it's like David Cronenberg's SCANNERS to me. Great ideas, average to bizarre execution. But that Elmer Bernstein (Airplane!, An American Werewolf in London, Ghostbusters) score is FIRE. And also, Mark Hamill really does rock that platinum blond. He should do that again. --------------------------- Closing Song: "I Could Give You All That You Don't Want" - The Twilight Sad --------------------------- Review THE MOVIES on Apple Podcasts & I'll read it on the next episode! --------------------------- Follow Daniel on: Twitter - @TheMovies_Pod Instagram - @themoviespod Letterboxd - https://letterboxd.com/Daniel_Berrios/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/themoviespodcast/message
In 1982, the world was introduced to a groundbreaking science-fiction film called Tron. Directed by Steven Lisberger and produced by Walt Disney Productions, Tron was unlike anything audiences had seen before. It was a movie that used innovative techniques and cutting-edge special effects to create a stunning world inside a computer. Tron was a pioneer in the realm of computer graphics and has had a lasting impact on the world of science fiction.
Original airdate 4/9/18 Mark Radulich and Sean Comer put yet another film On Trial! This time it's the original Tron (1982) film. Tron is a 1982 American science fiction action-adventure film written and directed by Steven Lisberger, based on a story by Lisberger and Bonnie MacBird and produced by Walt Disney Productions. The film stars Jeff Bridges as a computer programmer who is transported inside the software world of a mainframe computer where he interacts with programs in his attempt to escape. Bruce Boxleitner, David Warner, Cindy Morgan, and Barnard Hughes star in supporting roles. Disclaimer: The following may contain offensive language, adult humor, and/or content that some viewers may find offensive – The views and opinions expressed by any one speaker does not explicitly or necessarily reflect or represent those of Mark Radulich or W2M Network. Mark Radulich and his wacky podcast on all the things: https://linktr.ee/markkind76 also snapchat: markkind76 FB Messenger: Mark Radulich LCSW Tiktok: @markradulich twitter: @MarkRadulich
Alison, Brady and Josh rez into Tron - the 1982 CGI sci-fi paragon directed by Steven Lisberger and starring Jeff BridgesPlus!Right Now Wrong Then, Malibu Express, Triangle of Sadness, Cats and Dogs, Morbius, Pride and Prejudice (2005), It's A Wonderful Life, Spirited, Smile, The Whale, Jack Frost (1997), day planners and having gratitude!Send submissions to our Child Throwing and Man on Fire lists!Leave us a voicemail! We'll play it on the show. Check out the Solid Six Store!Letterboxd: Alison, Josh, BradyEmail us - podcast@solidsix.netFollow us on Instagram, Facebook, and TwitterLeave a review on Apple Podcasts and Spotify!
55º FESTIVAL INTERNACIONAL DE CINE FANTÁSTICO DE CATALUÑA Welcome to Sitges 2022!!! Hacemos un recorrido por todo lo que ha dado este festival. Esperad al final, un pequeño análisis de Tron (1982) de Steven Lisberger. Equipo Maniático: Albert San (Mr. Maniático), Naila Knight, Miguel y Montse Vela. Intro Musical "1983 Main Titles" Album Beyond the Black Rainbow (2014) by Sinoia Caves Outro Musical "Asimilasyon" Album Narin Yalnızlık (2015) by She Past Away - Saludos Maniáticos!!!!!!
On this episode of Cyberpunk Summer, we are discussing TRON, a 1982 adventure film directed by Steven Lisberger and starring Jeff Bridges as a software engineer-turned-arcade owner, who is corporeally transported into cyberspace by a power-hungry computer program. Anita and Kat are joined by acclaimed author, public speaker, and travel writer, Geraldine DeRuiter, to sift through the film's convoluted plot, and perhaps more importantly, its legacy as one of the earliest movies to use computer-generated animation and groundbreaking technology. Note: Enjoy this episode of the podcast as a video at patreon.com/femfreq or on Youtube here: https://youtu.be/3VaUZ0luumITime Stamps:49:23 - What's your Freq Out?Kat on the “What I Want” music video by MUNAAnita on the movie Doctor Strange and the Multiverse of MadnessGeraldine on the series Our Flag Means DeathLinks Mentioned:Roger Ebert's review: https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/tron-1982Kat's freq out: https://youtu.be/ysQl74R_TogFind Geraldine:https://twitter.com/everywhereisteverywhereist.comFind Us:Join our PatreonOur WebsiteSubscribe to FFR on Apple PodcastsSubscribe to our Star Trek PodcastTwitterInstagramtwitch.tv/femfreq (every Thursday at 6:30pm P
On this episode of The Movies Made Us Do It, Durs and Matt discuss Steven Lisberger's TRON from 1982. #StevenLisberger #TRON #Disney #TRONmovie #JeffBridges #BruceBoxleitner #DavidWarner #filmreview #MovieReview #FilmPodcast #MoviePodcast #DursProductions #DursProductionsPodcasts
Finnish director Hanna Bergholm put her creative spirit into her new body-horror coming-of-age film for IFCMidnight, Hatching. But she's hear today to tell us about feeling seen by another creative spirit: the titular Lucy Muir in Joseph L. Mankiewicz's 1947 classic The Ghost and Mrs. Muir.Then, Jordan has one quick thing about Tron, obviously.Hatching is in theaters and will hit streaming in the US starting May 17, 2022.***With Jordan Crucchiola and Hanna Bergholm
Charles Skaggs & Xan Sprouse continue their retrospective of Twin Peaks Actors in Other Films by discussing Tron, the 1982 science fiction action-adventure film directed by Steven Lisberger, starring David Warner as Edward Dillinger/Sark/MCP, Jeff Bridges as Kevin Flynn/Clu, Bruce Boxleitner as Alan Bradley/Tron, and Cindy Morgan as Lora Baines/Yori! Find Us Here: Twitter: @GhostwoodCast @CharlesSkaggs @udanax19 Facebook: Facebook.com/GhostwoodPodcast Email: GhostwoodPodcast@gmail.com Listen and subscribe to us in Apple Podcasts and leave us a review!
Greetings and welcome to The I/O Tower: a podcast for all things TRON. I'm your host, David Fleming. In this episode, I talk with TRON storyboard artist and computer image choreographer Bill Kroyer. Bill was working at Disney when Steven Lisberger lured him away to work as animator on "Animalympics" (1980), and from there was among the first to begin working with Steven on TRON. Bill describes how TRON was originally conceived of as a hand-animated feature, but once Disney signed on with a bigger budget, computer animation techniques quickly expanded the possibilities. Along with storyboard artists Jerry Rees and the legendary Jean "Moebius" Giraud, Bill had a blast storyboarding TRON. But the inclusion of computer-generated imagery presented the first-ever challenge of moving a story through both hand-drawn and computer-animated scenes seamlessly. To meet this challenge, Bill and Jerry developed a method of conveying 3-space movements of digital objects, writing thousands of numbers on a first-ever form of animation sheet for computer animators. After TRON, Bill worked on the similarly inspired "Automan" TV series, developing Automan's sidekick, Cursor - a character much like Bit from TRON! Bill shares many stories with us from his 40-plus years in Hollywood, including his time at MAGi/SynthaVision, Digital Productions, Kroyer Films, Rhythm & Hues, and Chapman University as head of their digital arts department. END OF LINE
Greetings and welcome to The I/O Tower: a podcast for all things TRON. I'm your host, David Fleming. In this episode, I talk with TRON storyboard artist and computer image choreographer Bill Kroyer. Bill was working at Disney when Steven Lisberger lured him away to work as animator on "Animalympics" (1980), and from there was among the first to begin working with Steven on TRON. Bill describes how TRON was originally conceived of as a hand-animated feature, but once Disney signed on with a bigger budget, computer animation techniques quickly expanded the possibilities. Along with storyboard artists Jerry Rees and the legendary Jean "Moebius" Giraud, Bill had a blast storyboarding TRON. But the inclusion of computer-generated imagery presented the first-ever challenge of moving a story through both hand-drawn and computer-animated scenes seamlessly. To meet this challenge, Bill and Jerry developed a method of conveying 3-space movements of digital objects, writing thousands of numbers on a first-ever form of animation sheet for computer animators. After TRON, Bill worked on the similarly inspired "Automan" TV series, developing Automan's sidekick, Cursor - a character much like Bit from TRON! Bill shares many stories with us from his 40-plus years in Hollywood, including his time at MAGi/SynthaVision, Digital Productions, Kroyer Films, Rhythm & Hues, and Chapman University as head of their digital arts department. END OF LINE
Bill and Ted discuss Joseph Kosinski's 2010 “TRON Legacy” the action packed follow up to Steven Lisberger's 1982 groundbreaking sci-fi cult classic TRON. Computer programmer, Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges), long trapped within his own digital creation is forced into action when his son Sam (Garrett Hedlund) surprisingly arrives within The Grid. Together father and son […]
Frame Fatale es un podcast sobre películas no canónicas conducido por Sebastián De Caro y Santiago Calori. En este vigésimo noveno episodio, nos ocupamos de Razorback: Destructor (Razorback, 1984) de Russell Mulcahy y, como nos suele ocurrir, hablamos de esa, pero terminamos hablando de todas estas otras: La fiesta de Babette (Babettes gæstebud, 1987) de Gabriel Axel, Babe, el chanchito valiente (Babe, 1995) de Chris Noonan, Highlander, el último inmortal (Highlander, 1986) Arma letal (Ricochet, 1991), Resurrection (1999) y Highlander II: la batalla final ha comenzado (Highlander II: The Quickening, 1991) de Russell Mulcahy, Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982) de Tommy Lee Wallace, Noche de brujas (Halloween, 1978) de John Carpenter, Demonio del polvo (Dust Devil, 1992), La isla del Dr Moreau (The Island of Dr. Moreau, 1996) y Color Out of Space (2019) de Richard Stanley, Rey muerto (1995) de Lucrecia Martel, El carnaval de las almas (Carnival of Souls, 1962) de Herk Harvey, Engendro (Prophecy, 1979) de John Frankenheimer, Alien, el octavo pasajero (Alien, 1979) de Ridley Scott, Tiburón (Jaws, 1975) de Steven Spielberg, Aliens: el regreso (Aliens, 1986) de James Cameron, Los guerreros (The Warriors, 1979) de Jack Hill, Mal gusto (Bad Taste, 1987) de Peter Jackson, Diabólico (The Evil Dead, 1981) de Sam Raimi, The Vast of Night (2019) de Andrew Patterson, She Dies Tomorrow (2020) de Amy Seimetz, VFW (2019), The Mind's Eye (2015) y Bliss (2017) de Joe Begos, Mad Max (1979) de George Miller, Gallipoli (1981), La última ola (The Last Wave, 1977), Picnic sobre las rocas colgantes (Picnic at Hanging Rock, 1975), Los autos que se comieron París (The Cars That Ate Paris, 1974) y El plomero (The Plumber, 1979) de Peter Weir, Hombre in mañana (Wake in Fright, 1971) de Ted Kotcheff, La casa cercana al cementerio (Quella villa accanto al cimitero, 1981) de Lucio Fulci, Un noche escalofriante (Night of the Lepus, 1972) de William F. Claxton, Hombre lobo americano en Londres (An American Werewolf in London, 1981) de John Landis, Crepúsculo (Twilight, 2008) de Catherine Hardwicke, El enigma de otro mundo (The Thing, 1982) de John Carpenter, Guardianes de la galaxia (Guardians of the Galaxy, 2014) de James Gunn, Star Wars: Episodio I - la amenaza fantasma (Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace, 1999) de George Lucas, Blade Runner (1982) de Ridley Scott, Terminator 2, el juicio final (Terminator 2: Judgement Day, 1991) de James Cameron, Dick Tracy (1990) de Warren Beatty, El laberinto del Fauno (2006) de Guillermo del Toro, TRON (1982) de Steven Lisberger, Meteoro (Speed Racer, 2008) de Lana y Lilly Wachowski y Fletch, el extraordinario (Fletch, 1985) de Michael Ritchie... ... por si justo te dio paja anotar, y hasta nos dignamos a contestar preguntas de lxs oyentes. Podés comentar este episodio o agregar una pregunta que nada que ver usando el hashtag #FrameFatale en Twitter. Frame Fatale volverá el lunes que viene. Quizás sea una pegada total suscribirte en donde sea que escuches tus podcasts y tener la primicia que de todas maneras, ya explicamos varias veces, es lo menos importante.
Greetings and welcome to The I/O Tower: a podcast for all things TRON. I'm your host, David Fleming. This is Part 1 in my three-part series with TRON associate producer and co-visual effects supervisor Harrison Ellenshaw. Harrison tells us how he began at Disney as a matte painter, and how that work led him to Industrial Light and Magic to work on "Star Wars" and again later on "The Empire Strikes Back". Before "Empire", Harrison worked on Disney's "The Black Hole" alongside his father, famed matte painter and special effects creator Peter Ellenshaw—an experience Harrison describes as a true blessing. "The Black Hole" was nominated for two Academy Awards for Best Cinematography and Best Visual Effects. After "The Empire Strikes Back", Harrison found himself out of work when a desperate call from Disney led to his next job—and a chance meeting with Steven Lisberger, who had just pitched TRON to Disney. END OF LINE
Greetings and welcome to The I/O Tower: a podcast for all things TRON. I'm your host, David Fleming. This is Part 1 in my three-part series with TRON associate producer and co-visual effects supervisor Harrison Ellenshaw. Harrison tells us how he began at Disney as a matte painter, and how that work led him to Industrial Light and Magic to work on "Star Wars" and again later on "The Empire Strikes Back". Before "Empire", Harrison worked on Disney's "The Black Hole" alongside his father, famed matte painter and special effects creator Peter Ellenshaw—an experience Harrison describes as a true blessing. "The Black Hole" was nominated for two Academy Awards for Best Cinematography and Best Visual Effects. After "The Empire Strikes Back", Harrison found himself out of work when a desperate call from Disney led to his next job—and a chance meeting with Steven Lisberger, who had just pitched TRON to Disney. END OF LINE
Bill and Ted discuss Steven Lisberger's 1982 boundary pushing Sci-Fi film “TRON,” a futurist film made at the dawn of the personal computer and the explosion of the video game market. Lisberger envisions a world where analogue collides with digital in a struggle over what is real and what is programmed. Jeff Bridges stars as […]
Steven Lisberger, writer and director of the 1982 film Tron, joins the show to talk about the tech of making the film and the mythology of Tron itself. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
durée : 00:03:57 - La chronique de Thomas Croisière - Pas vacciné avec ses 2 programmeurs, la séance de Thomas Croisière hier c'était… "Tron" de Steven Lisberger, qui doit son titre à « Elec-TRON-ique », film de 1982, pionnier pour les images générées par ordinateur et aussi visionnaire qu'imbitable... - réalisé par : François AUDOIN
On this week's annotated deep dive, The Cultists present Steven Lisberger's cult classic ‘TRON' (1982). The story of a “scruffy” programmer (Jeff Bridges), who gets sucked into the glowing gridlocked world of The Computer, where avatars who remain devoted to their “users” are forced by the evil “master control program” to fight for their lives in gladiatorial combat, is, on the surface, your standard 80s action pitch—albeit with a shiny, future flair. And yet, what is often taken for granted is just how spectacular Tron's physical production and lasting industry impact was. From filming in actual nuclear research facilities and utter black box voids, to employing old school stage magician styles of optical illusion, to pioneering the computer's place in cinema at a time when no one else wanted to touch it, Tron stands alone as a remnant of a bizarre intersection of time and technique. A dazzling combination of practical lighting hacks, computer graphics, layered exposures, and backlit animation, no other film looks like Tron (and given how hard it was to make, it's likely that nothing else ever will). Deep Dives include: The “expert systems” revival and the thaw of the first AI winter; the Lawrence Livermore Lab locations; the benefits and drawbacks of shooting in 65mm; the trouble with lightcycles; the “neats” and “scruffies” of A.I. development; Dumont's forgotten TV network namesake origin; and Alan's ‘Day the Earth Stood Still' (1951) not-so-hidden killer robot reference. Episode Safeword(s): “off the grid”
John Cusack goes full Rambo in this movie. That's probably the best part of Hot Pursuit, released May 8th in 1987. Sure, there's also a lot of entertaining hijinks out in the Caribbean like running around, getting lost, being on a ship with a guy who's almost a pirate, and also a handful of car chases... But it's the Cusack being Rambo part that we can't quite get over. Join the Bad Porridge Club on Patreon for TWO bonus episodes each month! https://www.patreon.com/oldiebutagoodiepod Follow the show! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/oldiebutagoodiepod/ Facebook: https://fb.me/oldiebutagoodiepod Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjfdXHxK_rIUsOEoFSx-hGA Podcast Platforms: https://linktr.ee/oldiebutagoodiepod Got feedback? Send us an email at oldiebutagoodiepod@gmail.com Follow the hosts! Sandro Falce - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sandrofalce/ - Twitter: https://twitter.com/sandrofalce - Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/SandroFalce/ - Nerd-Out Podcast: https://anchor.fm/nerd-out-podcast Zach Adams - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zach4dams/ Donations: https://paypal.me/oldiebutagoodiepod Please do not feel like you have to contribute anything but any donations are greatly appreciated! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
You wanna play some games. We will talk about games that are old school and give some history or cool info on them. My special guest is my dad. My read is from the opening scene of Tron a 1982 movie written and directed by Steven Lisberger. This movie was nominated for two Oscar Awards. Let's talk about games! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sage-mayer/support
Greetings, program! Master Control has chosen you to compete on The Game Grid. Your chance of survival is 49.2%. End of line. The 1982 movie Tron may seem outdated and even hokey today, but the film was more groundbreaking and prophetic than many people realize. I talk with Tron’s director Steven Lisberger about the challenge of making a movie about computers without the help of computers. Media scholars Lars Schmeink and Sherryl Vint discuss the influence of Tron on our understanding of virtual worlds and our place in cyberspace. Plus, writer Daniel Frey talks about why most of the sci-fi about Silicon Valley today fits the category of “near future,” including his novel The Future is Yours. Today's episode is brought to you by Serial Box and BetterHelp. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? We have partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle our advertising/sponsorship requests. They’re great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started. Imaginary Worlds AdvertiseCast Listing Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Les salles de cinéma étant fermées, nos chroniqueu.r.s.es vous parlent de films à voir sur les différentes plateformes. "Golden Glove" de Fatih Akin (en VOD sur iTunes, GooglePlay, Netflix) "The Empty Man" ( en VOD sur iTunes, GooglePlay, etc.) "Fou de toi" de Dani de la Orden (Netflix) Conseils : "Tron" de Steven Lisberger (en VOD sur iTunes, GooglePlay, ou pour les abonnés de Disney+) "Antoinette dans les Cévennes" de Caroline Vignal (VOD sur cinefile.ch) Avec Rafael Wolf et Stéphane Gobbo
Check out Tristan's new YouTube channel at The Pop Critic. Be sure to subscribe because content is coming in hot!Also, follow us on Instagram here
This week, the society discusses the legendary 1982 release Tron, starring Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner, David Warner, and directed and written by Steven Lisberger. Join us as we get digitized and spend a few microcycles in the digital world. You won't believe the warfare that goes on in your computer!Follow us on Twitter and Instagram @medfieldfilm for the latest updates.
Musique, Ciné, Bouquins et Culture en Vrac !Emission #48 animée par : Jérémie Grima, LeBon Deun, Antony Josse, Bertrand Pinsac, Wilhem Hørn et Michel Jovet.Au programme :CINE ZONE : * Tron, de Steven Lisberger (film)* Capitaine Conan, de Bertrand Tavernier (film)* Rubber, de Quentin Dupieux (film)* The Void, de Steven Kostanski & Jeremy Gillespie (film)BOOK ZONE* La Horde du Contrevent, d'Alain DamasioTALK SHIT, GET SHOTGAME ZONE* Virtuaverse* Myst
On this episode the Knerds review the 1982 classic Tron. Directed by Steven Lisberger and starring Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner, and Cindy Morgan.
Greetings, programs, and welcome to The I/O Tower: a podcast for all things TRON. I'm your host, David Fleming. This is part two of my three-part interview with TRON visual effects supervisor Richard Taylor. Today, Richard picks right up from his work at Robert Abel & Associates, taking us on a deep dive into how that work found its way into TRON and the techniques used to create the special effects of TRON—glowing circuits, light cycles, disc streaks and tails, sparks when the tank crashes, and so many more! We also get to know about many of the people of TRON, from those working behind the scenes to render each of its 24 frames per second, to those leading its creation such as director Steven Lisberger, co-effects supervisor Harrison Ellenshaw, and visual futurists Syd Mead, Jean 'Moebius' Giraud, and Peter Lloyd. In Part 3 to air later, Richard talks about TRON's reception within the film industry, the marketing of TRON, and how TRON has changed the world for so many artists and moviegoers. We also talk about the recent traumatic event in Richard's life when he suffered a stroke, and how he's recovering and moving forward creatively. END OF LINE
Greetings, programs, and welcome to The I/O Tower: a podcast for all things TRON. I'm your host, David Fleming. This is part two of my three-part interview with TRON visual effects supervisor Richard Taylor. Today, Richard picks right up from his work at Robert Abel & Associates, taking us on a deep dive into how that work found its way into TRON and the techniques used to create the special effects of TRON—glowing circuits, light cycles, disc streaks and tails, sparks when the tank crashes, and so many more! We also get to know about many of the people of TRON, from those working behind the scenes to render each of its 24 frames per second, to those leading its creation such as director Steven Lisberger, co-effects supervisor Harrison Ellenshaw, and visual futurists Syd Mead, Jean 'Moebius' Giraud, and Peter Lloyd. In Part 3 to air later, Richard talks about TRON's reception within the film industry, the marketing of TRON, and how TRON has changed the world for so many artists and moviegoers. We also talk about the recent traumatic event in Richard's life when he suffered a stroke, and how he's recovering and moving forward creatively. END OF LINE
Après Amazon, Apple, Netflix, OCS, Disney entre dans la danse des plateformes de streaming. La firme aux grandes oreilles vient de mettre une grosse partie de son catalogue en ligne et on y trouve une pépite de la science-fiction. Réalisé en 1982 par Steven Lisberger, Tron a été une révolution cinématographique. Il s’agit d’un des premiers films mêlant prises de vue réelles et images de synthèse. Cette œuvre cyberpunk narre l’histoire de Flynn interprété par Jeff Bridges. Ce programmeur de jeu vidéo se transforme en hacker pour prouver que son ancienne entreprise lui a volé la paternité de ses oeuvres. Projeté dans le système informatique qu’il a lui même créé. Il va devoir s’allier avec Tron, un programme pour sauver ce royaume virtuel du terrible MCP alias Maitre de Contrôle Principale. Une quête épique commence dans un univers onirique et visuellement anachonique. Notre invité Mehdi Achouche qui est maitre de conférence en Anglais à l’université de Lyon 3 a soutenu une thèse en 2011 intitulée : L'Utopisme technologique dans la science-fiction hollywoodienne, 1982-2010 : transhumanisme, posthumanité et le rêve de "l'homme-machine".
Steven Lisberger, writer and director of the 1982 film Tron, joins the show to talk about the tech of making the film and the mythology of Tron itself. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Steven Lisberger, writer and director of the 1982 film Tron, joins the show to talk about the tech of making the film and the mythology of Tron itself. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Strap yourself into your Edgley Optica ultralight for 90 minutes of one of Robin's favourite movies ever! Slipstream is an oft-forgotten sci-fi movie from 1989 staring Star Wars' Mark Hamill, Aliens' Bill Paxton and Jurassic Park's Bob Peck. And if that doesn't get you wanting to watch it, Slipstream was produced by Gary Kurtz (who also produced Star Wars and The Empire Strikes Back) and was directed by Steven Lisberger who also directed Tron! With all the big names involved in its production it's gotta be great, right? Well... it's not great. But it does have a lot of great elements in it and even Darren agrees it gets better with subsequent viewings.
Rotoscoping is a divise technique within the world of animation, creating an exciting and intriguing new form of motion. Proxy walks the gang through the history behind this technique, as well as several examples of it! Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotoscoping https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMjucU3YQQU https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotoshop Extra Examples Given: Tron (dir. Steven Lisberger, 1982) Charles Schwab advertisements, "Talk To Chuck" (2005) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LCmX_JRv2o0 Flowers of Evil (dir. Hiroshi Nagahama, 2013) https://www.sakugabooru.com/post/show/19503
Following the Oscars, Corey (@coreyrstarr) and Jonathan (@berkreviews) decided to pick an actor who they love but had major gaps in their viewing history. Thus, March's theme is Best Actor goes to Jeff Bridges! That's right, The Dude himself is our focus for Movie Club this month and March gives them five weekends which means five different Jeff Bridges movies. Corey gets to pick first and then they alternate every week as per usual. Each episode features an in-depth review of the movie for the week initially spoiler free and then diving in completely after a spoiler warning. Before getting into the review Jonathan and Corey discuss what other movies they've seen since the last episode as well as anything else they feel like discussing. To help them decide which of the many films to watch each month they started creating themes for them all. Week 2 - TRON (1982) Jonathan picked a movie that's been on his gap list for far too long. TRON (1982) has always been on his radar, but the overall '80s aesthetic has kept him from diving in; until now. Written and directed by Steven Lisberger, TRON stars Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner, and David Warner. TRON is "A computer hacker is abducted into the digital world and forced to participate in gladiatorial games where his only chance of escape is with the help of a heroic security program," according to IMDb.com. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/berkreviewscom-moviecasts/support
Disney's first big foray into the realm of computer animation would prove to be a box office disappoiuntmen in 1982, but garner a legion of fans over the years for its revolutionary design work and the influence it still continue to have in science fiction today. Jeff Bridges stars as Kevin Flynn, video game programmer, who is ripped off of several ideas by an unscrupulous power hungry man named Ed Dillinger. Dillinger soon starts a meteoric rise to the top of a powerful global corporation, Encom, while the computer that runs it has become so powerful that it is a life-force unto itself, thinking and talking (not to mention plotting world domination). Flynn tries to hack into the computer to get evidence of Dillinger’s theft, when the Master Control Program sucks Flynn into its own cyber-world, dubbed “the grid”, where programs in the voice and form of the programmers that created them are mere toys by which Master Control Program uses for its own enjoyment. Bruce Boxleitner, Cindy Morgan and David Warner also star in this film by Steven Lisberger.
Tron is a 1982 American science fiction action-adventure film written and directed by Steven Lisberger, based on a story by Lisberger and Bonnie MacBird and produced by Walt Disney Productions. The film stars Jeff Bridges as a computer programmer who is transported inside the software world of a mainframe computer where he interacts with programs in his attempt to escape. Bruce Boxleitner, David Warner, Cindy Morgan, and Barnard Hughes star in supporting roles.
Steven Lisberger’s groundbreaking live-action Disney film TRON is one of the few 1980s properties that doesn’t get explicitly referenced in Steven Spielberg’s new adaptation of Ernest Cline’s novel READY PLAYER ONE, but the earlier film makes up a significant portion of RP1’s source code. After discussing our reactions to READY PLAYER ONE, and hashing out what made Cline’s novel become so strangely controversial, we look at what connects and distinguishes these two films about life inside a video game, from their attitudes about human/computer relationships to how they approach the idea of corporate control. Plus, Your Next Picture Show, where we share recent filmgoing experiences in hopes of putting something new on your cinematic radar. Please share your comments, thoughts, and questions about TRON, READY PLAYER ONE, or both by sending an email to comments@nextpictureshow.net, or leaving a short voicemail at (773) 234-9730. Your Next Picture Show: • Genevieve: Anders Walter’s I KILL GIANTS• Scott: Andrew Haigh’s LEAN ON PETE• Tasha: Rich Moore’s WRECK-IT RALPH SHOW NOTES: Works Cited:• “The Ready Player One Backlash, Explained” by Constance Grady (Vox.com)• “Ready Player One is a truly awful book. I’m really looking forward to the movie” by Todd VanDerWerff (Vox.com)• “Ernest Cline: Ready Player One” (review) by Kevin McFarland (AVClub.com)• Ernest Cline’s “Ultraman is Airwolf” (ErnestCline.com)• “Here are all the references in Ready Player One” by Abraham Riesman (Vulture.com)• “I Kill Giants director Anders Walter on making a likable fantasy with a hateful protagonist” by Tasha Robinson (TheVerge.com)• “Our film critic and the director of a movie he hated sat down and tried to work out their differences” by David Ehrlich (Indiewire.com) Outro Music: Rush, “2112 (The Temples of Syrnix)” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Steven Spielberg’s new READY PLAYER ONE turns videogaming into both a fantasy adventure and a meta-narrative about adventure fantasies, a premise that feels directly inspired — and given Ernest Cline’s source novel, almost certainly is — by Steven Lisberger’s 1982 Disney oddity TRON. Before digging into what connects the two films, we dive into TRON’s glow-y, rudimentarily CGI-ed mainframe to consider the bits and bytes that drive this fascinatingly flawed film, from its confusing religious undertones (overtones?) to its strange real world/virtual world disconnect. Plus, we continue to wade through the ocean of feedback on our episodes pairing STALKER and ANNIHILATION. Please share your comments, thoughts, and questions about TRON, READY PLAYER ONE, or both by sending an email to comments@nextpictureshow.net, or leaving a short voicemail at (773) 234-9730. Outro music: “Only Solutions” by Journey (TRON OST) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Con este programa llegamos a la mágica cifra de 100 programas, se dice pronto, pero atrás quedan casi tres temporadas nuestro paso por Uniradio, cadena SER, nuestros viajes a los videoclubs para realizar los directos, gente que ha caído por el camino, una nominación a los premios del cine andaluz ASECAN y seguimos con una nueva etapa que comenzamos en este programa con Onda Jaén, esperemos que dure mucho, y si no es así, nosotros seguiremos de todas formas. Y para conmemorar este programa hemos elegido una película de culto, TRON, película que marcó los esquemas de la estética de la evolución informática de usuario que comenzaba a revolucionar el mercado y las vidas de los hogares en los 80. Con guión y dirección de Steven Lisberger, llega a los videoclubs de manos de la Walt Disney Home Edition, "Filmayer" de los años 80, aquella en la que salía "Mickey" vestido de brujo, con caratula blanca y que era exclusiva para alquiler. Tron nace como el nombre de un videojuego o programa para usuarios, como bien avecinaba por aquel entonces Lisberger, pero más que eso es un concepto futurista, un descubrimiento generacional hacia las nuevas tecnologías que llega hasta hoy en día. Para nosotros es una película que marca un punto de parada obligatoria en la línea de evolución del cine, con una abstracción de conceptos en su interior de gran dificultad interpretativa y que a pesar de no ser comprendida en su día, Lisberger sabe describir perfectamente. Hemos hablado en el programa de todo esto, de la nostalgia del videojuego y los primeros ordenadores que entraron en los hogares, de la retro tecnología, si se puede llamar así, de los efectos especiales de TRON, de Disney, de la dificultad de la ejecución de este proyecto de película, de los actores, del montaje e incluso hemos tenido tiempo para poner en su sitio a TRON LEGACY, para nosotros una gran película y no solo por su espectacular banda sonora, y además hemos hablado de todo el universo que hay alrededor de la historia que se inició en el 1982 con esta película incluida su serie de animación que es el verdadero hilo conductor del legado de TRON. Como siempre hemos contado con un Highlander, en este caso el invitado ha sido nuestro amigo remaker y jugón Jesús Martínez Megías, y el equipo del programa en esta ocasión con Javi García y Rafael Teruel curiosamente en los mandos técnicos, dirigido y presentado por el que os escribe Juan Pablo Videoclubsero.
Con este programa llegamos a la mágica cifra de 100 programas, se dice pronto, pero atrás quedan casi tres temporadas nuestro paso por Uniradio, cadena SER, nuestros viajes a los videoclubs para realizar los directos, gente que ha caído por el camino, una nominación a los premios del cine andaluz ASECAN y seguimos con una nueva etapa que comenzamos en este programa con Onda Jaén, esperemos que dure mucho, y si no es así, nosotros seguiremos de todas formas. Y para conmemorar este programa hemos elegido una película de culto, TRON, película que marcó los esquemas de la estética de la evolución informática de usuario que comenzaba a revolucionar el mercado y las vidas de los hogares en los 80. Con guión y dirección de Steven Lisberger, llega a los videoclubs de manos de la Walt Disney Home Edition, "Filmayer" de los años 80, aquella en la que salía "Mickey" vestido de brujo, con caratula blanca y que era exclusiva para alquiler. Tron nace como el nombre de un videojuego o programa para usuarios, como bien avecinaba por aquel entonces Lisberger, pero más que eso es un concepto futurista, un descubrimiento generacional hacia las nuevas tecnologías que llega hasta hoy en día. Para nosotros es una película que marca un punto de parada obligatoria en la línea de evolución del cine, con una abstracción de conceptos en su interior de gran dificultad interpretativa y que a pesar de no ser comprendida en su día, Lisberger sabe describir perfectamente. Hemos hablado en el programa de todo esto, de la nostalgia del videojuego y los primeros ordenadores que entraron en los hogares, de la retro tecnología, si se puede llamar así, de los efectos especiales de TRON, de Disney, de la dificultad de la ejecución de este proyecto de película, de los actores, del montaje e incluso hemos tenido tiempo para poner en su sitio a TRON LEGACY, para nosotros una gran película y no solo por su espectacular banda sonora, y además hemos hablado de todo el universo que hay alrededor de la historia que se inició en el 1982 con esta película incluida su serie de animación que es el verdadero hilo conductor del legado de TRON. Como siempre hemos contado con un Highlander, en este caso el invitado ha sido nuestro amigo remaker y jugón Jesús Martínez Megías, y el equipo del programa en esta ocasión con Javi García y Rafael Teruel curiosamente en los mandos técnicos, dirigido y presentado por el que os escribe Juan Pablo Videoclubsero.
¡Feliz Navidad! ¡Feliz año nuevo! Últimamente grabamos tan poco que no sé ni qué año felicito, pero aquí estamos una vez más, intentando compensar nuestra falta total de escrúpulos y profesionalidad con un episodio cargado de contenido arenga fanboy.COMENTARIOS (hasta 12'10")NOTICIASAVANCES:Dead Space 2 [PS3, 360, PC] (2011, Visceral Games/EA)Little Big Planet 2 [PS3] (2011, Media Molecule/Sony)Mass Effect 2 [PS3] (2011, Bioware/EA)JUEGOS DE LA "QUINCENA":Castlevania: Lords of Shadow [PS3, 360] (2010, Mercury Steam, Kojima Prod./Konami) Split/Second: Velocity [PC, PS3, 360, PSP, iPhone, Java] (2010, Black Rock Studio/Disney Interactive)Infinity Blade [iOS] (2010, Chair Entertainment, Epic Games)Fist of the North Star: Ken's Rage [PS3, 360] (2010, Omega Force/Koei) CÓMIC:Hellboy (La cacería salvaje - Mike Mignola/Duncan Fegredo)CINE:Tron: Legacy (2010, Joseph Kosinski)Tron (1982, Steven Lisberger)
Steven Lisberger, writer and director of the 1982 film Tron, joins the show to talk about the tech of making the film and the mythology of Tron itself. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Video Game Movie Anatomy hosts break down Video Game inspired movies to answer the age old question: DO GAMES MAKE GOOD MOVIES?!?! In today's episode, hosts Mark Donica and Stacey Shuttleworth discuss the Sci-Fi Video Game Classic, Tron! Tron is a 1982 American science fiction film written and directed by Steven Lisberger, based on a story by Lisberger and Bonnie MacBird, and produced by Walt Disney Productions. The film stars Jeff Bridges as a computer programmer who is transported inside the software world of a mainframe computer where he interacts with programs in his attempt to escape. Bruce Boxleitner, David Warner, Cindy Morgan, and Barnard Hughes star in supporting roles. Tron was released on July 9, 1982 in 1,091 theaters in the United States. The film was a moderate success at the box office, and received positive reviews from critics who praised the groundbreaking visuals and acting. However, the storyline was criticized at the time for being incoher
We Fight for the User This week on Episode 50, Johnny and Brian finish up Disney Sci-Fi month by talking about TRON! They also have some quick news bites and what about that Game of Thrones Season 6 Finale! News Bites Starman Movie Remake Batman vs. Superman Ultimate Cut Steps out of the Shadows Captain America’s Hydra Roots Explained Star Trek New Movie Universe by Any Other Name TRON(s) (Legacy) TRON the 1982 science fiction film written and directed by Steven Lisberger, based on a story by Lisberger and Bonnie MacBird, was produced by Walt Disney Productions. The film stared Jeff Bridges as a computer programmer who was transported inside the software world of a mainframe computer where he interacts with programs in his attempt to escape. Bruce Boxleitner, David Warner, Cindy Morgan, and Barnard Hughes star in supporting roles. Source: Wikipedia TRON: Legacy, the 2010 action film directed by Joseph Kosinski from a screenplay written by Adam Horowitz and Edward Kitsis, was based on a story by Horowitz, Kitsis, Brian Klugman and Lee Sternthal. The a sequel to the 1982 film Tron, featured Jeff Bridges and Bruce Boxleitner reprising their roles as Kevin Flynn and Alan Bradley, respectively, as well as Garrett Hedlund, Olivia Wilde, and...
Alcanzamos las dos cifras en esta tercera temporada de SFC, o al menos en nuestra versión 3.0, con un nuevo episodio dedicado a los pioneros. Por eso Lluís comienza con uno de los más grandes del cómic como es Will Eisner y su obra Contrato con dios de 1978. Dirk sigue con su sección, y el pionero literario escogido es William Gibson, padre del fenómeno Cyberpunk, visionario del futuro, mesías del ciberespacio y responsable indirecto de artefactos clave para entender nuestra relación con la tecnología como son The Matrix y Ghost In The Shell. Alex continúa con una película pionera en su momento con el uso de las animaciones por ordenador, como fue la película Tron de 1982 (buen año) de Steven Lisberger e interpretada por el notas de Jeff Bridges. E Isma se ha sentido inspirado. No ha habido generación en la cual se haya innovado en el mondo pixel. Así que Isma (a pelo) se atreve a compartir qué innovaciones ha vivido él a lo largo de sus años de vicio. Selene nos vuelve a acompañar. Muy feliz y risueña ella. Una semana más, gracias por acompañarnos y esperamos que disfrutéis de este nuevo episodio. Escúchanos en iTunes e Ivoox, síguenos en www.twitter.com/SuperculturaFC, en www.facebook.com/SuperculturaFreakChow y visítanos en superculturafreakchow.blogspot.com
Brought to you by Slipstream the Game. The most exciting new board game you could possibly imagine, as long as you've never heard of or ever played a board game! It's got Bill Paxton, Mark Hamill, Bob Peck, Ben Kingsley, Robbie Coltrane, F. Murray Abraham and was produced by Gary Kurtz from Star Wars fame and directed by Steven Lisberger who wrote and directed Tron?!?! How is this such an unknown and poorly received film??? We'll attempt to discover the answers when we view it. Streaming Do's and Don'ts Odd Thomas - Netflix Jackie Chan is The Prisoner or Island of Fire - Shoutfactory.TV Fearless Hyena - YouTube The Last Shark - YouTube Good Neighbor, Bad Neighbor Hannibal Lector Luke Skywalker Samwise Gamgee
Greetings, Programs! Thirty-two years ago (and a week), the world was treated to a unique experience with the release of TRON, a Disney production that combined live action, traditional animation, backlight techniques, and computer generated graphics on a scale which had never before been seen. Developed from the imagination of Steven Lisberger upon seeing the potential in backlit graphics and computer animation, TRON embraced and amplified the expanding world of computers before the world at large truly understood them or their potential. TRON has been embraced by a community of fans who saw it when it was released in 1982, fans who were introduced to it later, and even the generation whose first TRON experience came in the form of TRON: Legacy and TRON: Uprising have recognized the amazing story, themes, and industry-changing processes created out of necessity to tell this story bridging two worlds on either side of the computer screen. JAMIE joins SHUA and SHAZ this month to talk about some of the behind-the-scenes aspects of this truly innovative feature. PLUS: You can wear a bit of TRON on your wrist if you act soon by going to touchofmodern.com and checking out some of the glowing timepieces offered there this week. One favorite is the SEVENwatch with two discs on the face that comes in TRON blue, SARK red, or USER white. Let us know what you think about the podcast or about anything TRON-related. Contact us at podcast@TechnoRetroDads.com, tweeting to @TRON_DTG, or leave a voicemail at (209) 878-7323. Don’t forget to let Disney know how much you like TRON (in all its various presentations) and that you want more! TRON LIVES
The initial financial failure of Disney's Tron (directed by Steven Lisberger) was attributed to the enormous expectations based on the egregious expense of the project because of the complicated computer effects. Tron was simplistic story-wise, and the replication of the feel of a video game would become commonplace not long after its 1982 release. The […]
Co-host Jeffery Heatherly and I discuss Tron, Steven Lisberger's 1982 epic of light bikes and deadly discs. In our wide-ranging conversation we talk about the lack of real logic in the plot, the techniques that went into creating this special effects milestone, consider the Tron franchise as a whole and beatbox our way into film music history.
In this episode of the Spiraken Movie Review ,Deke is released from the Re-Cloninator and Helps Xan review one of Disney's Most Experimental Films from the 1980's, The 1982 Cyberpunk, sci fi fim "Tron" directed by Steven Lisberger and starring Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxlieter, and David Warner. Deke, Xan and Ash also read some emails and comment on several intriguing concepts brought on from watching Tron. Also a shout out to everyone who sent us an email Thank you and send more. Rememer we have two contests going on right now. The Top 10 Movie Vehicles of All Time Contest and the big Tronouski quote Contest. For more info please check the forum under contests for rules and prizes Please send us any comments concerns and ideas on how to make this podcast better. Let us know so we can do something about it. Also check out the facebook fangroup Spiraken Movie Review, And finally, listen to the primary podcast, The Spiraken Manga Review and check out Xan's sidekickery on the fightbait.com podcast Hope you enjoy. Music For Episode: Intro Music -Creaton of Tron by Wendy Carlos (Tron OST),Background Music - Scherzo by Wendy Carlos ( Tron ),Background Music - Break in by Wendy Carlos ( Tron OST),Background Music - Wormhole by Wendy Carlos ( Tron OST),Background Music - End Theme by Wendy Carlos ( Tron OST),Ending Music -Only Solutions by Journey ( Tron OST) Our Website http://www.spiraken.com Our Forum http://spiraken.darkbb.com Our Email Spirakenmovie@gmail.com My Email xan@spiraken.com Cohost's Email deke.spiraken@gmail.com Cohost's Email ash.spiraken@gmail.com Our Twitter Spiraken Our facebook fangroup Spiraken Movie Review Xboxlive Gamertag Xan Spiraken Our Voicemail 206-350-8462 Random Question of the Week: What is your quote from the Big Lebowski Tronized?
Tron! The team discusses the 1982 film and its rumored sequel. From director Steven Lisberger to artistic visionaries Syd Mead and Moebius to actors Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner and David Warner. We interview the Tron Guy and more!