Posté : ven. 24 déc. 2010 14:25

Un avis est toujours très personnel. Moi j'ai un histoire particulière avec la saga Tron pour laquelle j'ai les yeux de Chimène.J'attendais rien du 1er, j'ai été emballé et il m'a bien fait rêver.J'attendais rien du 2ème, et j'ai encore été emballé et il m'a aussi fait rêver.Le critique cherche les défauts et finit par ne rien aimer du tout.Le passionné cherche les qualités et finit par tout aimer ou presque.J'essaie d'être tempéré en regardant avec les yeux d'un passionné et en analysant avec les yeux d'un critique.Effectivement histoire et personnages auraient pu être davantage travaillés et être plus marquants.Par contre visuellement c'est entre la féerie et la tuerie : c'est vraiment magnifique et enchanteur.Cela donne envie de confier un budget conséquent à la même équipe pour avoir un bon film de SF !C'est bien sûr très personnel comme avis
Le projet n'est pas mort !Screenwriter Jesse Wigutow has signed on to rewrite the next, still-untitled TRON sequel. The Hollywood Reporter says that he'll rewrite the current draft by David DiGilio, Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz and the studio appears to have renewed interest in bringing about the sequel sooner rather than later.
Deadline a écrit :EXCLUSIVE: A new installment of Tron is coming back online. The Dish hears that Disney is in early negotiations to set Joachim Rønning to direct Jared Leto in Tron Ares. The film is crewing up, eyeing an August start date in Vancouver.
Deals aren’t complete yet, but this would mark the fourth collaboration between Disney and the Norwegian filmmaker who helmed Maleficent: Mistress of Evil, and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales. He has wrapped for the studio the Daisy Ridley-starrer Young Woman and the Sea, about the daring journey of Gertrude Ederle, a New York teen who became the first woman to swim across the English Channel. Jeff Nathanson scripted it and Jerry Bruckheimer produces with him.
Now it’s on to the Disney sci-fi franchise, which began with the 1982 film that starred Jeff Bridges and was set inside the computer program called the Grid, where a computer hacker is abducted and forced to participate in gladiatorial games. The first one wasn’t more than a cult favorite, though its special effects were seen as game-changing at the time. That following swelled around the film in years to come as it played on cable only helped grow its popularity, to the point where Disney decided to move forward with a sequel, Tron: Legacy, in 2010, with Bridges reprising his role and Garret Hedlund and Olivia Wilde joining the franchise. That film grossed $400 million globally, and Disney has been trying to figure out how to continue the franchise since.
Studio got close in 2017 with Leto. Now it will be in the hands of Rønning, who early on broke into Hollywood co-directing with Espen Sandberg Kon-Tiki, the 2013 film that was nominated for the Best Foreign Film Oscar, and chronicled Thor Heyerdah’s epic 4300 mile crossing of the Pacific Ocean on a balsawood raft in 1947. Young Woman and the Sea isn’t slotted yet, but it has been testing strongly.
The Tron: Ares script is by Jesse Wigutow and is considered the sequel to Tron: Legacy, which was directed by Joe Kosinski (Top Gun: Maverick).