Kat User
Posts: 2,394 | Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Wednesday, November, 02, 2011 7:03 AM
Realized after I posted in the other thread that it makes a lot more sense to make a separate new one. So:
Kaisergrendel Wrote:Kat Wrote:Do we also want deviations between Betrayal and OT, or just T:L? |
Might as well do both and Evolution as well |
Well, I've not played Evolution, so I'll have to leave that to someone else.
Okay:
Betrayal vs. OT:
--Betrayal seems to imply Flynn created the whole Encom Grid, inc. the MCP. Um... highly unlikely.
--"Flynn was a fast learner and soon dominated the Games." Um... he played ONE game. He won, yes, but I wouldn't call that "dominating the Games."
--Nitpicky, but color: in the lightcycle section, they show a yellow cycle trapped between an orange and blue cycle and hitting the wall. Wrong color!
However. I will give a slight pass to this section, because the prologue is supposed to be Dumont doing a narrative to record on Flynn's disc for posterity, and the style of writing makes me think discrepancies could be due to the fact that there may well be a few egotistical embellishments on Flynn's part, so this could be intentional by the authors rather than a mistake.
Betrayal vs. T:L:
--The prologue of Betrayal refers to "Flynn's story begins in the world of the Users, a city of angels and lights." We've debated before that T:L, at least, does NOT take place in Los Angeles but a fictional city (I don't believe the intended city itself is clear in OT, is it?)
--Gridbugs feature prominently in Betrayal; they're not even mentioned in T:L. Now, if they were indeed due to the Isos as Clu conjectures, then yes, there wouldn't be rampant infestations since Clu got rid of the Isos, but to not mention them at all??
--Clu creation: again, this is nitpicky, but dialogue is a bit different, visuals too. Can't say this is a big concern for me, but if you want to get really down and dirty with the differences...
--Method of forming lightcycles seems slightly different. Design of Tron's cycle is different than the cycles we see in T:L as well, but then we never see whatever cycle Tron would have had, so it could be his is just of a slightly different design. I'm not necessarily willing to call it a discrepancy.
--In Betrayal, Alan says to Flynn, "You go off the grid for days at a time; no one can contact you. I can't find you." This sort of seems to imply Flynn's in the Grid for days at a time (if he was just at home, Alan could call him, right?). But in T:L, he tells Sam the portal can only stay open for a millicycle-- about 8 hours on-Grid, or about ten minutes in the real world. Not several real-world days. But Alan's words are sort of ambiguous, so who knows.
--Emergence of the Isos. In Betrayal, Flynn/Clu call Tron and show him a video of the first Iso emerging from the Sea, wearing a regular black Grid suit. In T:L, Flynn and Clu see a whole bunch of them walking from (somewhere), dressed in primitive robes.
--Jordan's parents seem to be caring for Sam in Betrayal; in T:L it seems to be Flynn's parents and Jordan's are never mentioned.
--In Betrayal, Flynn leaves Encom to try to restore some order to his personal life. In T:L, they make it look like he was with the company until he disappeared.
--Tron somehow escapes from Clu in Betrayal. It's been argued that in T:L, Flynn doesn't actually know what happened to Tron. I kind of find it hard to believe he somehow escaped only to be captured again later (and I find it much better for the storyline that he was taken by Clu right then), but I think that's the direction they're taking with the animated series, so I guess that's the way they mean it to be.
--In Betrayal, the batons seem to be used as weapons somehow. At least, Tron's often shown with a disc in one hand and a baton in the other, and in the short part that shows the betrayal by Clu, Clu's guards are attacking with batons, seeming to have one in each hand. We know from T:L that the batons can be formed into swords, staves, etc., so this makes sense, but in Betrayal they're rarely actually shown taking other forms. And most programs in T:L, inc. Tronzler, aren't shown to use them as weapons at all.
--In T:L, it's implied that Clu simply goes bad because he's on a power trip and sees the Isos as imperfection, and he attacks Flynn for little reason. In Betrayal, it seems to be shown that the Isos did indeed bring some sort of instability to the system and Clu is angry because he is the only one trying to fix it, and Flynn's rarely there (and when he is, he actually doesn't do anything). Clu seems far more justified in Betrayal.
I'm probably missing stuff, but it's getting late and I'm tired.
(Betrayal question. In the part where Lora comes to tell Flynn she's moving, he's on the phone with Jordan when she walks in, and all is well. Lora's not there five minutes before Jordan's calling back, and the secretary says, "she says it's urgent." What's so urgent? She just talked to him ten minutes ago and nothing was happening. Right after this it cuts to the Grid, and when we get back to the real world, it's obviously a totally different time. What on earth was so urgent, and why put that in there unless it was something worth telling us about?)
What do you want? I'm busy.
Program, please!
Chaos.... good news. |
AriesT User
Posts: 171 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Wednesday, November, 02, 2011 7:24 AM
Just one general comment:
Due to the fact, Matrix 2 and 3 were destroyed because some of the side stories built up on the AniMatrix and in-between novels and games (at least one aspect why Matrix 3 was sheet), I do NOT accept any additional media anymore beside the core media and for this franchise it is the films.
However, it is nice to see the differences between films and graphic novel and game.
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DevourTheLiving User
Posts: 108 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Wednesday, November, 02, 2011 11:40 AM
Kat Wrote:Realized after I posted in the other thread that it makes a lot more sense to make a separate new one. So:
Kaisergrendel Wrote:Kat Wrote:Do we also want deviations between Betrayal and OT, or just T:L? |
Might as well do both and Evolution as well |
Well, I've not played Evolution, so I'll have to leave that to someone else.
Okay:
Betrayal vs. T:L:
--The prologue of Betrayal refers to "Flynn's story begins in the world of the Users, a city of angels and lights." We've debated before that T:L, at least, does NOT take place in Los Angeles but a fictional city (I don't believe the intended city itself is clear in OT, is it?)
--Gridbugs feature prominently in Betrayal; they're not even mentioned in T:L. Now, if they were indeed due to the Isos as Clu conjectures, then yes, there wouldn't be rampant infestations since Clu got rid of the Isos, but to not mention them at all??
--Clu creation: again, this is nitpicky, but dialogue is a bit different, visuals too. Can't say this is a big concern for me, but if you want to get really down and dirty with the differences...
--Method of forming lightcycles seems slightly different. Design of Tron's cycle is different than the cycles we see in T:L as well, but then we never see whatever cycle Tron would have had, so it could be his is just of a slightly different design. I'm not necessarily willing to call it a discrepancy.
--In Betrayal, Alan says to Flynn, "You go off the grid for days at a time; no one can contact you. I can't find you." This sort of seems to imply Flynn's in the Grid for days at a time (if he was just at home, Alan could call him, right?). But in T:L, he tells Sam the portal can only stay open for a millicycle-- about 8 hours on-Grid, or about ten minutes in the real world. Not several real-world days. But Alan's words are sort of ambiguous, so who knows.
--Emergence of the Isos. In Betrayal, Flynn/Clu call Tron and show him a video of the first Iso emerging from the Sea, wearing a regular black Grid suit. In T:L, Flynn and Clu see a whole bunch of them walking from (somewhere), dressed in primitive robes.
--Jordan's parents seem to be caring for Sam in Betrayal; in T:L it seems to be Flynn's parents and Jordan's are never mentioned.
--In Betrayal, Flynn leaves Encom to try to restore some order to his personal life. In T:L, they make it look like he was with the company until he disappeared.
--Tron somehow escapes from Clu in Betrayal. It's been argued that in T:L, Flynn doesn't actually know what happened to Tron. I kind of find it hard to believe he somehow escaped only to be captured again later (and I find it much better for the storyline that he was taken by Clu right then), but I think that's the direction they're taking with the animated series, so I guess that's the way they mean it to be.
--In Betrayal, the batons seem to be used as weapons somehow. At least, Tron's often shown with a disc in one hand and a baton in the other, and in the short part that shows the betrayal by Clu, Clu's guards are attacking with batons, seeming to have one in each hand. We know from T:L that the batons can be formed into swords, staves, etc., so this makes sense, but in Betrayal they're rarely actually shown taking other forms. And most programs in T:L, inc. Tronzler, aren't shown to use them as weapons at all.
--In T:L, it's implied that Clu simply goes bad because he's on a power trip and sees the Isos as imperfection, and he attacks Flynn for little reason. In Betrayal, it seems to be shown that the Isos did indeed bring some sort of instability to the system and Clu is angry because he is the only one trying to fix it, and Flynn's rarely there (and when he is, he actually doesn't do anything). Clu seems far more justified in Betrayal.
I'm probably missing stuff, but it's getting late and I'm tired.
(Betrayal question. In the part where Lora comes to tell Flynn she's moving, he's on the phone with Jordan when she walks in, and all is well. Lora's not there five minutes before Jordan's calling back, and the secretary says, "she says it's urgent." What's so urgent? She just talked to him ten minutes ago and nothing was happening. Right after this it cuts to the Grid, and when we get back to the real world, it's obviously a totally different time. What on earth was so urgent, and why put that in there unless it was something worth telling us about?)
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If you had played Evolution, you'd see even more discrepancies. The character Ophelia, for example, is named Radia in Evolution, and they're supposedly the same character (same dress and all).
As far as the light cycle design goes, there are different generations of light cycles. The original Tron had Gen 1, Flynn's in Legacy was Gen 2. The only Gen 3 seen is seen in the PSP version of Evolution (which is an entirely different storyline and game to the PS3, Xbox, and PC versions) which is a sleeker version of Gen 2, starting to lead into Gen 4. Gen 4 is the one in Betrayal and the other Evolution games. Gen 5 is the predominantly featured light cycle in Legacy, being the latest and most advanced of all the previous light cycle designs.
The sad thing about the film, the graphic novel, and the game, is that they didn't have a cohesive partnership to make sure all the threads wouldn't be dangling between them. There are hints to each other, such as Quorra mentioning Anon (the protagonist from Evolution) when she discusses The Purge with Sam.---"A sympathetic program smuggled me out of the city."---The three sources are all supposed to be canon, from what I've read, but all offer slightly different variations on the same event.
What I do typically is when it comes to the three storylines conflicting, I just go with what the movie said happened.
For Uprising, I guess Clu either thought Tron was dead (which doesn't make sense) or just left him for dead, assuming he would derez. I'm not sure how they'll justify it, but we'll have to wait for the series to show us.
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Kaisergrendel User
Posts: 298 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Wednesday, November, 02, 2011 7:56 PM
Thanks for doing this, Kat.
My own contribution on this would be (as I mentioned in another thread) Zuse's utter lack of differentiation in T:L and Betrayal, where he was supposed to be in his normal persona and not the same flamboyant bar-owning self he is in T:L. They completely ignored the fact that Zuse became Castor to disguise his former identity.
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trekking95 User
Posts: 2,440 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Wednesday, November, 02, 2011 7:59 PM
Kaisergrendel Wrote:Thanks for doing this, Kat.
My own contribution on this would be (as I mentioned in another thread) Zuse's utter lack of differentiation in T:L and Betrayal, where he was supposed to be in his normal persona and not the same flamboyant bar-owning self he is in T:L. They completely ignored the fact that Zuse became Castor to disguise his former identity. |
So if you act like Castor, but where the same clothes as Zuse, people would think they are two different people? I dont think we are that stupid! Thanks to FlynnOne for the signature!
Save Tron 3! |
Kaisergrendel User
Posts: 298 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Wednesday, November, 02, 2011 8:10 PM
trekking95 Wrote:Kaisergrendel Wrote:Thanks for doing this, Kat.
My own contribution on this would be (as I mentioned in another thread) Zuse's utter lack of differentiation in T:L and Betrayal, where he was supposed to be in his normal persona and not the same flamboyant bar-owning self he is in T:L. They completely ignored the fact that Zuse became Castor to disguise his former identity. | So if you act like Castor, but where the same clothes as Zuse, people would think they are two different people? I dont think we are that stupid! |
Exactly! Not only that, he still retained ownership of End of Line, the same mannerisms and the same accent. I wonder, if Sam started calling himself a different name (he did identify himself as Sam Flynn), would all the programs suddenly forget that he's a user??on line abortion pill misoprostol dose abortion medical abortion pill online
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trekking95 User
Posts: 2,440 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Wednesday, November, 02, 2011 9:13 PM
Kaisergrendel Wrote:trekking95 Wrote:Kaisergrendel Wrote:Thanks for doing this, Kat.
My own contribution on this would be (as I mentioned in another thread) Zuse's utter lack of differentiation in T:L and Betrayal, where he was supposed to be in his normal persona and not the same flamboyant bar-owning self he is in T:L. They completely ignored the fact that Zuse became Castor to disguise his former identity. | So if you act like Castor, but where the same clothes as Zuse, people would think they are two different people? I dont think we are that stupid! |
Exactly! Not only that, he still retained ownership of End of Line, the same mannerisms and the same accent. I wonder, if Sam started calling himself a different name (he did identify himself as Sam Flynn), would all the programs suddenly forget that he's a user?? |
Programs must be dumb! Or there are 10 other programs that look like Castor but just act different! Thanks to FlynnOne for the signature!
Save Tron 3! |
Kat User
Posts: 2,394 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Wednesday, November, 02, 2011 10:00 PM
Kaisergrendel Wrote:Thanks for doing this, Kat.
My own contribution on this would be (as I mentioned in another thread) Zuse's utter lack of differentiation in T:L and Betrayal, where he was supposed to be in his normal persona and not the same flamboyant bar-owning self he is in T:L. They completely ignored the fact that Zuse became Castor to disguise his former identity. |
I wondered that, too. I mean, he's not mentioned, but he does show up in the background in a couple pictures.
trekking95 Wrote:Kaisergrendel Wrote:Thanks for doing this, Kat.
My own contribution on this would be (as I mentioned in another thread) Zuse's utter lack of differentiation in T:L and Betrayal, where he was supposed to be in his normal persona and not the same flamboyant bar-owning self he is in T:L. They completely ignored the fact that Zuse became Castor to disguise his former identity. | So if you act like Castor, but where the same clothes as Zuse, people would think they are two different people? I dont think we are that stupid! |
Why not? They seem to expect us to believe that for a thousand cycles, nobody pointed out that the emperor was showing a bit of skin-- i.e. that this guy who looks exactly like Tron is now Clu's evil henchman.
I thought of another difference today too, but I can't remember now what it was. i know it had to do with a time discrepancy-- the amount of time between X and Y in one of them wasn't the same amount of time that was implied in the other. Hopefully I'll think of it eventually.
Oh, I think I remember. In T:L, it seems like the Isos were discovered right before Flynn disappears-- he went to Alan saying he had some big revelation, and he tells Sam about "a miracle: the same night he disappears. But in Betrayal, it seems to be several years between the emergence of the Isos and Flynn's disappearance.
Oh, and another: in OT, Tron's left-handed (i believe someone has said Bruce is left-handed). In T:L, he's right-handed (because they switched actors and I guess didn't think to keep that the same). In Betrayal, I looked to see how they'd draw it, and he seems to be ambidextrous-- in some pictures he seems to be using his left hand as his dominant hand, and in some he seems to be using his right (I'd give you page-number examples, but there don't seem to be page numbers).
(For those who have Betrayal.... have a look at page 126, the "development art" section at the end. In that sketch of Tron and Alan, the notes written on there... can anyone read what it says? Something about "narrower mouth, thinner eyebrows" but I can't read the rest so I can't tell what they're talking about-- difference in appearance between Alan and Tron, or Alan/Tron and Flynn? (Because I see something about "Flynn" in there too).
(Heh. Later we can do a thread looking for discrepancies between OT and the OT graphic novel...) What do you want? I'm busy.
Program, please!
Chaos.... good news. |
trekking95 User
Posts: 2,440 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Wednesday, November, 02, 2011 10:49 PM
Or:
Flynn couldn't get to the portal as it was almost closed (as Flynn said to Tron when Clu attacked them), but he fought for the ISOs for a long time and Clu fed on his resistance, etc.
Thanks to FlynnOne for the signature!
Save Tron 3! |
Kat User
Posts: 2,394 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Wednesday, November, 02, 2011 11:05 PM
trekking95 Wrote:Or:
Flynn couldn't get to the portal as it was almost closed (as Flynn said to Tron when Clu attacked them), but he fought for the ISOs for a long time and Clu fed on his resistance, etc.
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Betrayal *ends* with Clu's betrayal, though. The Isos show up in the middle, before Flynn even leaves Encom... and after he leaves Encom, before the betrayal part, he says "years passed." So unless he spent years (real=world years, which would be hundreds of cycles in-Grid) studying the Isos before he told Alan about them, it's definitely a discrepancy.
Betrayal doesn't make it clear how much time passes between the end of the story (where Clu has poisoned the Sea) and the epilogue (the betrayal in '89). We don't know if all that happens in Flynn's same trip to the Grid, or not. If not, it seems weird he'd to go Alan all excited about the Isos when he knows there won't be any more. But if so... well, it's possible, but the feel of the transition between story and epilogue makes it seem like some time has passed. What do you want? I'm busy.
Program, please!
Chaos.... good news. |
trekking95 User
Posts: 2,440 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Wednesday, November, 02, 2011 11:08 PM
I would have to read Betrayal to know what you mean!
Thanks to FlynnOne for the signature!
Save Tron 3! |
Kaisergrendel User
Posts: 298 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Thursday, November, 03, 2011 1:23 AM
Kat Wrote:Kaisergrendel Wrote:Thanks for doing this, Kat.
My own contribution on this would be (as I mentioned in another thread) Zuse's utter lack of differentiation in T:L and Betrayal, where he was supposed to be in his normal persona and not the same flamboyant bar-owning self he is in T:L. They completely ignored the fact that Zuse became Castor to disguise his former identity. |
I wondered that, too. I mean, he's not mentioned, but he does show up in the background in a couple pictures.
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Oh btw Evolution shows Zuse a lot more prominently - still the same as Castor.where to buy abortion pill ordering abortion pills to be shipped to house buy abortion pill online
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cool83 User
Posts: 411 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Thursday, November, 03, 2011 1:35 AM
(Betrayal question. In the part where Lora comes to tell Flynn she's moving, he's on the phone with Jordan when she walks in, and all is well. Lora's not there five minutes before Jordan's calling back, and the secretary says, "she says it's urgent." What's so urgent? She just talked to him ten minutes ago and nothing was happening. Right after this it cuts to the Grid, and when we get back to the real world, it's obviously a totally different time. What on earth was so urgent, and why put that in there unless it was something worth telling us about?)
I've been hoping for a Tie-in with Tron and, the now Disney owned, Marvel Avengers comics. I would like to think that S.H.I.E.L.D., unbeknownst to Flynn, has known about the GRID and is working with Dr. Laura Baines to head off any future problems or dangers.. I see her working with Agent Coulson, or another S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent. I would love to see Quorra, at the end credits of The Avengers Movie, as a new avenger, introduced by Agent Coulson. I think the Tie-in would help build the New Tron Franchise. I know it is a stretch for die-hard comics fans, but I think it could work. Any takers.where to buy abortion pill http://blog.bitimpulse.com/template/default.aspx?abortion-types buy abortion pill onlineabortion pills online abortion pill online purchase cytotec abortion
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Kaisergrendel User
Posts: 298 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Thursday, November, 03, 2011 2:00 AM
cool83 Wrote:I've been hoping for a Tie-in with Tron and, the now Disney owned, Marvel Avengers comics. I would like to think that S.H.I.E.L.D., unbeknownst to Flynn, has known about the GRID and is working with Dr. Laura Baines to head off any future problems or dangers.. I see her working with Agent Coulson, or another S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent. I would love to see Quorra, at the end credits of The Avengers Movie, as a new avenger, introduced by Agent Coulson. I think the Tie-in would help build the New Tron Franchise. I know it is a stretch for die-hard comics fans, but I think it could work. Any takers. |
HMMMMMM. Could work if done right.
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EXODUS User
Posts: 573 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Thursday, November, 03, 2011 8:39 AM
First of all, I want to say there are some very good (and interesting) points raised here regarding the film & graphic novel, and having read through them all I would like to offer a few opinions on how I see the various points that have been raised here:
DuMont in the prologue:
*The way I see it, the thing to bear in mind is that in many of the key events he describes (like the Lightcycle game & rebuilding the damaged Recognizer) DuMont WASN’T EVEN THERE when those events took place-he WASN’T PRESENT at the time, so he would probably have to take Flynn’s own word for most of it (which, has been already pointed out, could be leaning towards his own ego somewhat).
Gridbugs feature prominently in Betrayal:
* I think there’s two possibilities here-(a) the Gridbugs STILL actually exist but are simply not seen in Legacy, or (b) over the last 20 years Clu had them hunted down to the point of extinction has part of his plan for the perfect system (between the two I personally prefer this theory).
Has we all know, Clu can be brutally efficient in that sense….
Clu’s Creation:
* Given what we know about Clu’s existence, I think it’s pretty straight forward really-Flynn designs the basic design template for Clu at his computer terminal in the arcade cellar (has seen in Betrayal) and when he’s satisfied he enters the Grid & and simply finishes the final details of him and activates him (has seen in Legacy), therefore making both versions accurate.
In other words, in Betrayal he was pretty much doing a ‘rough sketch’ of what he wanted Clu to look like/be like at his computer terminal, and in Legacy we see that he’s actually happy with the ‘sketch’ that he did & has now built him (in front of that ‘mirror’ thing that comes out of the floor).
Tron’s Lightcycle is differant:
* Like DevourTheLiving has pointed out, so far I’ve seen at least four different variations of the Lightcycles, each representing a different point in its overall evolution from 1982 to Legacy. I can only assume that the one that Tron has in Betrayal represents a particular ’model’ at some point over the 28 year time period.
Alan says “You go off the Grid for days at a time. No one can contact you. I can‘t find you”:
* Reading that in the story, I’ve always assumed that it was just a FIGURE OF SPEECH & nothing else. I don’t think he meant that LITERALLY-to me, it was has if he was politely saying “Come on, Kevin! Your running a multi-million dollar international company! Stop letting your mind wonder into a day-dream & pay attention to what’s going on around you”.
I think Alan was just saying that to try and keep Flynn’s feet on the ground seeing how he seems to be acting increasingly odd has time goes by….
Emergence of the ISOs:
* Betrayal states that the ISOs started emerging from the Sea, and that Flynn was informed of it.
The way I see it, to have one previously unknown life form appear out of nowhere like that would have been quite a surprise to everyone (a ‘miracle’ he called it).
But to see HUNDREDS of them appear EN MASSE out of no where in a HUGE GROUP? I don’t think anyone on the Grid was really expecting THAT to happen, least of all him (“You seeing this?”). In my opinion, that look of surprise on his face when he sees the group walking towards him isn’t because it’s the first time he’s seen them, it’s because he’s never seen SO MANY OF THEM TOGETHER at once.
Like I said, these are how I interpreted the points mentioned, and are my own personal opinion on them, so please feel free to put down what you think yourselves.
There is, however, one more point I would like to raise:
At the end of the first film Flynn defeats the MCP by jumping into it, and in the process gets beamed back into our world.
But in the novel DuMont says that Flynn had given him the information about his time there in the Tron world.
I want to know how did he do this? Did he at some point after the first film go back into that world to find him & give him the information in person?
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Vaporware User
Posts: 217 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Saturday, November, 05, 2011 7:13 AM
I was excited when I got Betrayal and read it immediately.
I initially found that it provided some valuable details. Who Sam's mother was, how Clu was able to send a page back out of the Grid... and well... that was about it.
During a second, closer, reading dissatisfaction crept in as the excitement of access to the untold story wore off. I started tallying up a mental list of inconsistencies similar to Kat's.
Reading the Tron Wiki, I discovered that Betrayal is not officially cannon. It's not non-cannon, either - just undetermined. Same with Evolution. I think evolution will be far easier to "shoehorn" into the coherent storyline. Betrayal? I'm not sure what the graphic novel really gave us in terms of story or valuable plot points. LA vs. Center City, Tron's Defeat, Emergence of the ISOs, Gridbugs, poisoning the Sea... it' outweighs the few scraps of coherent information that we got.
To me, Betrayal is only slightly more "cannon" than Tron 2.0. Evolution makes a lot more sense. only a few problems there - mainly Zuse...
Lets also add the complexity that "Uprising" is going to give us. In the previews, we've already seen a much larger world than shown or mapped in Legacy...
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Kat User
Posts: 2,394 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Saturday, November, 05, 2011 11:27 AM
One thing that has really bugged me about Betrayal is the portrayal of Tron. He's easily my favorite character-- he's just an all-around stand-up guy. (Despite the fact that he's sort of a Mary-Sue, I still like him. He's the sort of Mary-Sue you can sort of appreciate, just 'cause sometimes your heroes gotta be heroes.) In Betrayal, they show him as sort of...apathetic, I guess. Bad stuff is happening, and Tron, who've we've come to expect is the sort of dude who takes action and solves problems and rights wrongs, just keeps saying "wait for Flynn. Wait for Flynn." Even when Clu's de-rezzing programs in the Games-- something Tron is shown as thinking to be wrong-- he still does nothing. He won't de-rez anyone himself, it's true, and he does confront Clu about it as soon as Clu finds out about it, but Clu pretty much gives him a mini-smackdown of "it's not going to change" and Tron just leaves without another word, and we see no evidence of him fighting it anymore; he doesn't even refuse to participate in the Games as a sort of boycott.
I am quite disappointed in the dude.where to buy abortion pill http://blog.bitimpulse.com/template/default.aspx?abortion-types buy abortion pill online
What do you want? I'm busy.
Program, please!
Chaos.... good news. |
Kaisergrendel User
Posts: 298 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Saturday, November, 05, 2011 10:13 PM
Maybe Tron requires user input to act?
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DevourTheLiving User
Posts: 108 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Monday, November, 07, 2011 5:18 PM
Kat Wrote:One thing that has really bugged me about Betrayal is the portrayal of Tron. He's easily my favorite character-- he's just an all-around stand-up guy. (Despite the fact that he's sort of a Mary-Sue, I still like him. He's the sort of Mary-Sue you can sort of appreciate, just 'cause sometimes your heroes gotta be heroes.) In Betrayal, they show him as sort of...apathetic, I guess. Bad stuff is happening, and Tron, who've we've come to expect is the sort of dude who takes action and solves problems and rights wrongs, just keeps saying "wait for Flynn. Wait for Flynn." Even when Clu's de-rezzing programs in the Games-- something Tron is shown as thinking to be wrong-- he still does nothing. He won't de-rez anyone himself, it's true, and he does confront Clu about it as soon as Clu finds out about it, but Clu pretty much gives him a mini-smackdown of "it's not going to change" and Tron just leaves without another word, and we see no evidence of him fighting it anymore; he doesn't even refuse to participate in the Games as a sort of boycott.
I am quite disappointed in the dude. |
I remember someone suggesting before that Tron physically couldn't beat Clu, and maybe the writer had that same idea when he wrote Betrayal. I would think he'd still resist as much as possible, but perhaps he couldn't do anything to Clu himself, so his only option was to wait for Flynn.
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Kat User
Posts: 2,394 | RE: Films vs. Tron: Betrayal on Monday, November, 07, 2011 7:25 PM
Kaisergrendel Wrote:Maybe Tron requires user input to act? |
I dunno, he doesn't seem to require it in other parts and for other things...
DevourTheLiving Wrote:
I remember someone suggesting before that Tron physically couldn't beat Clu, and maybe the writer had that same idea when he wrote Betrayal. I would think he'd still resist as much as possible, but perhaps he couldn't do anything to Clu himself, so his only option was to wait for Flynn.
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True, but it's not even all about beating/resisting Clu. I mean, the thing that was Clu's problem in the first place was instability in the Grid, which he believes is caused by the Isos (whether it is or not, I don't know). He keeps saying something needs to be done about it, and Tron and Shaddox both are like "nah, just wait." I mean, Tron kicks a lot of ass, but that's sort of the equivalent of shutting the barn door after the horse has gone (or at the very least, chasing the horse through the countryside rather than keeping the door shut to begin with).
The more I think about this story, the more difficult and true-to-life I realize it is and how skillfully it's really told (do I think the writing itself is fantastic? No. But the idea and intent is good). I mean, the whole thing is a parallel of the overpopulation debate in our world, yes? Tron/Shaddox are the people who sit on their hands and say "it would be mean to try to curb population even in humane ways" and Clu's the guy who's like "Yeah, let's just kill them or something." So then you wonder whose side you want to be on-- the guys who are nice and peaceful and love everybody BUT let everybody live in misery because they want to be nice, or the guy who's a total off-the-handle jerk BUT does actually want to fix things and make it so people don't live in danger?
They could've made it just a good vs. evil story, which I believe is what they did with T:L. But instead they made it downright uncomfortable because just when you think you know whose side you're on, you think "wait, but in the real world I actually think this other way in almost the exact same situation..."
What do you want? I'm busy.
Program, please!
Chaos.... good news. |
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