Rabu, 22 Desember 2010

TRON ( 1982 )

Date Released : 9 July 1982
Quality : Good
Info : imdb.com/title/tt0084827
Lihat : Trailer
Starring : Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner
Genre : Action | Adventure | Sci-Fi | Thriller
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SYNOPSIS

Seorang hacker secara tanpa sadar diculik ke dunia komputer dan dipaksa untuk berpartisipasi dalam permainan gladiator di mana satu-satunya kesempatan untuk melarikan diri adalah dengan bantuan program keamanan heroik. apakah dia mampu melarikan diri dari dunia game?apa saja petualangan seru yang dialamami di dunia maya itu, jangan sampai temen2 lewatkan versi Tron jadul ini sebelum melihat Tron versi 2010

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RESENSI

Tron is a 1982 American live-action-computer animated science fiction film written and directed by Steven Lisberger. Tron was produced by Walt Disney Productions and Lisberger Studios and released by Buena Vista Distribution Company. It stars Jeff Bridges as the protagonist hacker Kevin Flynn (and his program counterpart inside the electronic world, Clu), Bruce Boxleitner as security program Tron (and Tron's "user", Alan Bradley), Cindy Morgan as program Yori (and her "user", Dr. Lora Baines), Barnard Hughes as the tower guardian Dumont (and his user, Dr. Walter Gibbs) and Dan Shor as Ram. David Warner plays all three main antagonists: the program Sark, his "user", Ed Dillinger, and the voice of the chess program artificial intelligence Master Control Program. The film tells the story of Flynn as he attempts to hack into the ENCOM mainframe to prove that Dillinger has appropriated his work, but ends up being transported into the digital world itself as a unique program/user. There, he teams up with Tron to defeat the Master Control Program, who has been controlling the digital world.
Development of Tron began in 1976 when Lisberger became fascinated with Pong. Along with producer Donald Kushner, he set up an animation studio to develop Tron with the intention of making it an animated film. However, after talks with Information International, Inc., Lisberger decided to include live-action elements with the computer animation. Various film studios rejected the storyboards for the film until the project was set up at Disney. There, backlit animation was combined with the computer animation and live-action. Tron was released on July 9, 1982 in 1,091 theaters in the United States.
The film received positive reviews from critics. Critics praised the visuals and acting, but criticized the storyline. The film also was a box office success, grossing $33 million in the United States. Tron received nominations for Best Costume Design and Best Sound at the 55th Academy Awards, and received the Academy Award for Technical Achievement 14 years later. Tron developed into a cult film and eventually spawned into a franchise, which consists of multiple video games, comic books and an animated television series.[1] A sequel titled Tron: Legacy was directed by Joseph Kosinski and was released on December 16, 2010; it also saw the return of Lisberger, Bridges, and Boxleitner to the franchise and received mixed reviews from critics
 

Plot

Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges) is a young and gifted software engineer. He was once an employee of the software corporation ENCOM, and had developed several video games after hours to start his own company. However, a co-worker, Ed Dillinger (David Warner) stole Flynn's code and presented it as his own, earning him a rapid series of promotions. While Dillinger eventually became a senior executive of the company, Flynn was reduced to running a video game arcade, which ironically featured several of the games he had created.
Flynn tries to hack into the ENCOM mainframe to find evidence of Dillinger's wrongdoing, but the Master Control Program (MCP), an artificial intelligence that controls the ENCOM mainframe, blocks his attempts. Dillinger authorizes the MCP to enforce tighter security controls, which inadvertently locks out Alan Bradley (Bruce Boxleitner), an ENCOM employee and former colleague of Flynn. Bradley asks Dillinger about the lockdown and tells him about his own program, "Tron", a security program that would monitor communications between the MCP and the outside world. Dillinger dismisses Bradley, telling him to be patient. After Bradley leaves, the MCP admonishes Dillinger, saying it "cannot afford" to have programs monitoring it. It reveals its intent to break into the Pentagon, claiming it can run things much more efficiently than "any human". When Dillinger attempts to reassert his control over the MCP, it essentially blackmails him into complying with its wishes.
Meanwhile, Bradley and his girlfriend and co-worker Dr. Lora Baines (Cindy Morgan) approach Flynn, warning him that Dillinger has learned of his hacking attempt and the mainframe lockdown. Flynn convinces Bradley to bring him into ENCOM's laser laboratory, where tests are being done to attempt to digitize real objects into the computer. Lora seats Flynn at her terminal, where he attempts to hack his way into a different security group. The MCP confronts him and takes control of the digitizing laser, firing it at Flynn and digitizing him into the ENCOM mainframe.
Flynn appears in an input/output port surrounded by Programs, which are represented as human figures that resemble their creators. As he is taken to a holding area, Flynn learns that most Programs revere the Users, but that the MCP, through its commander Sark (Warner), is attempting to get them to renounce this "superstitious and hysterical belief". Programs that refuse to do so are forced to play in gladiatorial games, in which the loser is "de-rezzed" (killed). Flynn is sent to play in one of these games, but refuses to finish it. Sark terminates Flynn's opponent and is about to kill Flynn as well but lets him live due to the MCP's instructions: "I want him in the games until he dies playing." Shortly thereafter, Flynn meets Tron and learns of his intent to "take down" the MCP.
The two are then taken to the Light Cycle arena, where they escape into the mainframe along with another Program, Ram (Dan Shor). Sark's troops give chase, and Tron is forced to split off from the group and heads to the nearest input-output tower, while Flynn takes the wounded Ram to safety. As Ram de-rezzes, he realizes that Flynn is a User and asks him to help Tron. Flynn begins to discover the special powers he has within the digital world as he rebuilds and steals a damaged Recognizer, taking off in search of Tron.
Tron, meanwhile, sneaks into an input-output tower and receives instructions from Bradley to destroy the MCP. Tron then joins with Yori (Morgan) aboard a solar sailer simulation program to quickly get to the MCP. Flynn manages to climb aboard at the last minute and, along the way, reveals to them that he is a User. Sark's command ship destroys the sailer, capturing Yori and Flynn. Tron is believed to have been killed in the impact.
Sark takes a number of captured Programs and debarks his command ship, taking a shuttle to the MCP's core. He leaves Flynn and Yori aboard the ship and begins to de-rez it, but Flynn manages to keep it intact and Yori alive. Before telling the captured Programs of their fate, the MCP sends Sark out onto the mesa, saying it feels "a presence." Sark battles with Tron, who had snuck aboard his shuttle, while the MCP tells the Programs that it will assimilate them into itself. Tron gains the upper hand and severely damages Sark, prompting the MCP to transfer its functions and cause Sark to grow to immense size. ("Your User can't help you now, my little Program," the MCP remarks arrogantly.) Tron then attacks the MCP directly, attempting to break through its shield.
Flynn jumps from Sark's ship into the MCP's core, distracting it long enough to reveal a gap in its shield. Tron throws his disc through the gap, destroying the MCP and Sark, and freeing the digital world. I/O towers begin to light up all over the landscape as Programs begin to communicate with their Users.
As Tron and Yori ponder Flynn's fate, Flynn is sent back to the real world, reconstructed by the digitization laser at Lora's terminal. A printer next to him is printing out the evidence that he had sought, showing that Dillinger had "annexed" his code. Dillinger arrives the next morning to find the MCP non-functional and the evidence of his wrongdoing displayed on his screen. Some time later, Flynn is shown to have become the CEO of ENCOM.

Cast

Box office

Tron was released on July 9, 1982, in 1,091 theaters grossing USD $4 on its opening weekend. It went on to make $33 in North America—moderately successful considering its $17 budget

TRON

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Steven Lisberger
Produced by Donald Kushner
Ron Miller (executive)
Screenplay by Steven Lisberger
Story by Steven Lisberger
Bonnie MacBird
Starring Jeff Bridges
Bruce Boxleitner
David Warner
Cindy Morgan
Barnard Hughes
Dan Shor
Music by Wendy Carlos (score)
Journey (songs)
Cinematography Bruce Logan
Editing by Jeff Gourson
Studio Walt Disney Productions
Lisberger Studios
Distributed by Buena Vista Distribution Company
Release date(s) July 9, 1982 (1982-07-09)
Running time 96 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $17,000,000
Gross revenue $33,000,000
Followed by Tron: Legacy
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