Tron (Special Edition) (2-DVD) PG
A world inside the computer where man has never been. Until now.
Price: | $11.70 |
List Price: |
|
You Save: | $1.29 (10% Off) |
Currently Out of Stock:
We'll get more as soon as possible
Brand New
|
Also released as:
Tron (Blu-ray + DVD)
for $12.70
DVD Details
- Number of Discs: 2
- Rated: PG
- Run Time: 1 hours, 42 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: April 5, 2011
- Originally Released: 1982
- Label: Walt Disney Video
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner, David Warner, Cindy Morgan & Barnard Hughes | |
Performer: | Dan Shor & Peter Jurasik | |
Directed by | Steven Lisberger | |
Edited by | Jeff Gourson | |
Screenplay by | Steven Lisberger | |
Composition by | Walter Carlos | |
Produced by | Donald Kushner | |
Director of Photography: | Bruce Logan | |
Executive Production by | Ron Miller |
Entertainment Reviews:
...The first theatrical movie to extensively utilize computer-generated animation plays better today...
USA Today
A thrilling film to watch just because the visuals are so precisely what they should be: transporting you both into and beyond a very specific time in our culture's videographic history.
Full Review
Patheos
Rating: A- --
I really thought it was a cool sci-fi film and something different and unique.
Full Review
rachelsreviews.net
It's a simple idea that ought to serve, but Lisberger's failures of pacing, structure, variation, and characterization ultimately make the film seem monotonous and distant.
Full Review
Chicago Reader
Tron is loaded with visual delights but falls way short of the mark in story and viewer involvement.
Full Review
Variety
The visual appeal of the film is supported by a simple and well-crafted plot. [Full Review in Spanish]
Full Review
El Pais (Spain)
[I]ts eye-candy visuals were a gee-whiz harbinger of binary blockbusters to come. -- Grade: B-
Entertainment Weekly
Product Description:
A video game designer trying to prove a big time executive stole his idea is sucked into a corporation's mainframe where programs are personified counterparts of their writers and "users" are subjects of religious faith. A well-crafted and scripted metaphor, TRON benefits from breakthrough computer animation.