Category: Review


singofflogoNow that was a hell of a title.

I have to admit, the promotion for this show left me stunningly confused. “Shorter season,” “Two week Special”, “Holiday special”… Well, it would seem that we’re back to a 7 episode run that will be multiple episodes in a week. This feels a might bit rushed and pressured. We know that the actual production time is much longer. So, there may not be any instrumentation on the voices, but there is definitely a tonne of behind the scenes being cut to remove some of the reality of what goes into this show.

In my previous post, I had the chance to review 6 of the 10 groups that would be competing. Would we see another Pentatonix? Would we have another Fannin Family? Could a college group not sound pristine with a wall of sound? Could a classic Doo-Wop group modernize?

To answer these, let me get into the analysis and review

The Sing Off came back with a bang and much like “Family Guy” made no bones about being away for ‘too long.’ The show launched right out of the 2 minutes over finale of “The Voice” into it’s always big production number. A nice change is that each group gets a carve out to give a taste of their style and sound. You could tell that the Judges were thrilled to be there as they quietly mouthed (or sang) along from their box. There were fireworks. I figure if we can’t eliminate groups, 2nd degree burns are a good start. Both Shawn Stockman and Ben Folds were like giddy kids getting to see Santa again after missing him the previous year. (Not too far off). This year had one noticeable change. Jewel in for Sarah Bareilles. More 0n Jewel as the recap continues

For me, the thing that told me it was back was not the opening number, but the fun little opening theme to the show. It’s simple but captures the feel of the program. This of course was promptly followed by 98 Degrees own Nick Lachey making his fourth appearance as host. Initially I found Nick a little abrasive but he’s got a good feel going this year so he feels like part of the family.

The first episode (as is tradition) features “Signature Songs” I assume these are songs that are free pick from the groups to show what they think best represents them. (Assuming NBC can get the clearance for a performance. Pentatonix lost this one in season 3 as they couldn’t get clearance for their audition piece “Telephone”) The new season also adds a new wrinkle. “The Ultimate Sing Off.” At the end of the show the bottom group from the first half will sing against the bottom group from the second half for a chance to survive until next we… um…err… the next show. (Did I mention the schedule confused me?) I’m not going to go into detail here on the “Ultimate Sing Off” but I assuredly will later.

Onto the competition.

vocal-rushGroup 1: Vocal Rush – “Bottom of the River” – Delta Rae

Vocal Rush is a group of 12 high-schoolers from Oakland, California’s ‘Oakland School for the Arts.’ They’ve won the international championship for High School a cappella for the two years they’ve competed in it since the groups inception in 2011. Vocal Rush is the youngest group on the show for this season.

My review: The performance honestly surprised me. The song had a noticeable complexity which surpassed my preconceived guesses. The dancing in the group invoked a little too much show choir for me, but that’s not necessarily going to count against them. The two things that I noticed the most working against them was:

  • A noticeable bit of unevenness on entries. You could here a lot of separation in voices.
  • Male voices don’t deepen and richen (typically) before 18. The male voices were very thin.

The judges:

  • Ben Folds: Good soul, very focussed, Strong beat box, Great lead
  • Shawn Stockman: Shows strong maturity for age, excellent dynamics (swell) Liked the dancing Lead sold the song.
  • Jewel: Beautiful performance, Good swell, Good musical influences (Reminded her of Nina Simone bringing righteous anger)

 

home-freeGroup 2: Home Free – “Cruise” – Florida Georgia Line

5 Country singers from Minneapolis (and the road by way of RV) Home free travels the country performing at fairs and festivals trying to make a name for Country a cappella music. The performance of this piece was seeded to YouTube a week or so before the show. I had the chance to view this one in advance.

My review: I am assuredly not a fan of country music. I will respond to the occasional cross-over piece or mainstay. (I actually like “Thank God, I’m a Country Boy” though I’m not sure if it’s country or cross-over. That’s how far out of the country-loop I am) Home free to me played like Pentatonix – the tricks + Country. They have an amazing bass who (thanks the style) gets to run free a lot more. A good beat box which is not expected in the style at all. The vocal stylings were potent and strong. Tight harmonies… A contender for the series.

The Judges:

  • Ben: Felt the bass, loved the lead vocals by Austin, Great focus on the song
  • Jewel: Bluegrass tight harmonies that lend well to a cappella. Noted the bass range going from bass to tenor 1. Loved the lack of vibrato.
  • Shawn: Country is the White Man’s R&B. Tim is a natural “freaky” bass. Not trying to be a bass, simply is a bass. Loved Rob’s beard. Wants to hear more from them.

 

princeton-footnotes

Group 3: The Princeton Footnotes – “I Know You Were Trouble” – Taylor Swift

The Princeton Footnotes have an Ivy League Legacy that dates back to the early 1960s and…um… The 13 man singing…um… Sigh. I prescreened a song from the Footnotes and was sadly underwhelmed. I really try to enter in with an objective view; but the prescreen song was what I expect from Ivy League, College Glee. A lack of soul and personality. In the pre-performance group spotlight one of the members commented, “We each have our own little quirks.” Unfortunately, this read to me like, “See our tenor over there? He collects stamps!” Then I saw what they were performing. If you haven’t seen the a cappella performance of this piece by YouTube sensation “Walk Off The Earth with KRNFX” please watch it, because that is truly a canonical version of the song. And WOTE isn’t actually an a cappella group by nature. Needless to say, going in, this is the WRONG song for an Men’s College group. The problems?

  • Out of the get there were chord collisions
  • The lead vocalist was horribly tinny (along with most of the group)
  • Dynamic was “Wall of Sound” which readers from season 3 know I hate.
  • And the most offensive, inserting, “We love you, Ben” into the lyrics.

The Judges:

  • Shawn: Taylor Swift would never have imagined this version (A polite insult to the group), tenors/baritones held the core (suggestion others didn’t), Leads weren’t loose, too uptight.. But blames them coming from Princeton for that. (Not a good eval)
  • Ben: Good opening chord. Came unglued in the harmonies. Had an arc.
  • Jewel: Love’s Swift’s writing. (Does not relay that to the performance) “Melted down a bit”, notes that while there were tenors and baritones, the three basses which are the tonic of the chord didn’t lock it in and weren’t tight.

 

calle-sol

Group 4: Calle Sol – “Pon de Replay” – Rihanna

6 professional musicians from Puerto Rico who bring Latino a cappella along with some very fiery dancing. 4 women and 2 men (The men are the beatbox and the combined bass, bari, tenor) Calle Sol (Sun Street) hope to bring Latino music to a cappella and break into US audiences.

My review: The initial entry felt full enough to not sound like a cappella music. The women all share very strong chemistry and harmony. The dancing was energetic but left the attention on the men which are definitely a touch weaker than the women. The downsides:

  • While the beatbox had some great melodic percussion instruments (Block and cowbell) at times it seemed a little messy.
  • The vocal male was spread too thin and is neither bass nor tenor leaving the midrange feeling a bit thin and empty.

Judges:

  • Ben: Really fun and really unique sound. This can be an asset and a liability. Noticed the lack of a full sound.
  • Jewel: Everyone got a chance to shine. Female vocalists had a very good showing. The Plena rhythms were very impressive. Loved the melodic percussive instruments.
  • Shawn: Prime example of how a cappella lends to any style of music. If they can meet the challenge of filling the middle and the midrange, they have the potential of a greater height.

 

street-corner-renaissance

Group 5: Street Corner Renaissance – “What Makes You Beautiful” – One Direction

Every season of The Sing Off needs at least one good ol’ fashioned Doo-Wop group where the age of just one of the members is likely to exceed the total age of all the members of another group. SCR from Los Angeles brings in that old school sound. The concern with the Doo-Wop group in this series is that they play from a niche. They sing the old songs, they sing them one way.

My review: I saw this performance much like I did with Home Free. I was stunned to discover that this song is from a young English-Irish pop boy-band and is only about a year or two old. The original is assuredly not Doo-Wop. SCR on the other hand completely made this song their own. The song felt like a classic that was in my dad’s set of 45s. I don’t know if this kind of stunt arranging will get them thru the competition, but I want albums from them. Honestly, I just want to hug them.

The judges:

  • Shawn: Hug them was exactly what Shawn did. Each one at a time. You could tell this was his roots and his respect and his love. His comment upon sitting down, “Children, take notes.” he added that this was swag, it had texture, the harmonies are classic. This style will ALWAYS sound good. He pointed out the falsetto was smooth and enjoyed it immensly.
  • Jewel: Doo-Wop is about the feel. It’s not about tight or technical. They testified. The arrangement was just perfect.
  • Ben: The group had an honesty that gets lost in singers. He liked them

 

So… at the end of one half here were my picks from top to bottom:

  1. Home Free
  2. Street Corner Renaissance
  3. Calle Sol
  4. Vocal Rush
  5. Princeton Footnotes.

The judges call three safe… grill two, then pick the 4th safe eliminating the 5th.

3 safe:

  • Street Corner Renaissance
  • Vocal Rush
  • Home Free

And then add in: Calle Sol

Princeton Footnotes is at the bottom of Part 1 but will ‘Fight again?’ in the “Ultimate Sing Off”

In all it was a good mix of groups.

Tomorrow: the 2nd five groups, the Ultimate Sing Off, How the Judges did. And how the series looks going forwards in my less than edumicated opinion.

 

PTXAnd lo, after much wailing and gnashing of vocal chords, The Sing Off returns tonight. It has been far too long in my less than humble opinion. Granted, I will always take A Capella over the overly forced Drama of the Voice.

Now, I would love to think that I could pick this year’s Pentatonix successor in week one; but I really can’t say for sure. Last year, Pentatonix just leapt out of the screen at mach speed with their first entry. E.T. showcased a very young Pentatonix for the 5 things that make them such a musical powerhouse.

  1. The Lennon-McCartney tight harmonies of the Texas Trio of Scott, Mitch and Kirstie
  2. The Ravenscroftian profundo of Avi Kaplan’s Bass mixed with his knowledge of Tuvan overtones.
  3. The Mad Skillz of Kevin (K.O.) Olusola with a very broad selection of beatbox elements
  4. The mature and infectious arrangements that even in week one could improve on someone else’s music
  5. A bond between 5 people in shared love of music to make a sound greater than the sum of the parts.

I wish however that I wasn’t an unbiased fan. Having now seen them live in concert (with VIP tickets) I absolutely adore them and look forward to at least 5-10 more albums. Their recent X-mas entry of “The Little Drummer Boy” deserves HIGH rotation during the holiday season.

So, what can we expect for this (rumoured truncated, blah) season? We know that we are now on female judge number 3 with the introduction of Jewel. I look forwards to seeing how she enters in the mix. Until we know the format, it’ll be hard to say how things will roll.

The series is rumoured to have a bottom – 2 battle of the song sing off. They tried it once in the last season. Depending on the groups and the song it could be a coin flip or readily obvious who is getting the gun.

More after the show. It’s almost time to sing!

UPDATE: Having seen a blog posting talking about the groups; here are some pre-show opinions.

  • Home Free: ++ Country A Capella. I’m not a fan of country; this group could change my attitude.
  • Princeton Footnotes: — Ivy League A Capella doing what I truly dislike. One foot in the “Glee Club” grave
  • Street Corner Renaissance: + I love Doo Wop. But if it can’t bend the format… It won’t survive
  • Voice Play: +++ Pentatonix redux. Similar style, but just different enough to be a big contender.
  • The Filharmonic: + Filipino boy band. Nice sound. Top 50% but don’t think they will make the long haul
  • Akoustikats: ++ I’m not typically a fan of College All-Male A Capella. It suffers from what I call “Wall of Sound” These guys may just challenge that and survive.
  • Vocal Rush, Calle Sol, Ten, Element: No finds online to judge.

15 minutes on the East coast!

WS_OutOfNowhereI am a fan of Doctor Who. And I thought I’d start talking about the T-Shirts I’ve collected over the last few years that I really enjoy. This first one, I believe, actually predates the return of the series. The title of this shirt is “It Came Out of Nowhere.” Granted, one could suggest that it should be entitled “It Came Out of Nowhen,” but I suppose that’s just me being geeky and pedantic. Granted, a quick check shows that this shirt only dates back to 2009 so I am in fact bereft of accurate memory.

I like this shirt because it is just so simple and says so much. The design pulls from two fandoms and allows them to literally collide at the point that they cross over. There is no Doctor visible so this isn’t tied to any specific incarnation. It’s just a simple statement about both universes. This is the core of fan-fiction. Basically a double tribute that requires a penny-weight of thought to enjoy.

My only real issue with this shirt is minor. The grey background (similar to the white of the prints) all but loses the smoke coming out of the Delorian. I’m not exactly sure which fandom you’d call on to provide temporal road service, but it is fun to ponder.

I give this shirt 8 out of 10 sonic screwdrivers.

centurionThis post contains Spoilers from Doctor Who through the end of the first half of the 7th Series of the 2005 incarnation. There will be a warning when they start.

As mentioned before, I’ve been a fan of Doctor Who for a moderately long time. To give you and idea, I would run home from school to watch an episode on PBS. Typically they would run a 6 episode story over 4 days of the week and then run an entire story on Saturday afternoon. This was my joy after Saturday morning cartoons and before ABC’s Wild World of Sports. The latter I watched mostly for the opening with its “Agony of Defeat

My first Doctor was (like most Americans over 30) Tom Baker. I went to conventions in scary hotels, dressed in sad attempts to match clothing (There was no real thing as Cosplay) and bought many Target novelisations. I also decided at a young age to colour my spellings and hunt for Jelly Babies.

The down time was especially difficult. When a Science Fiction show goes away, it’s pretty much gone forever. As I like to term it, “I was a Doctor Who fan, when there was no Doctor Who” And the one shot movie… it was there… But it wasn’t ‘My Who.’

And then in 2005, a miracle occurred. I was one of those folks who pulled down the leaked episode the day before it aired because I “HAD TO KNOW.” The press was so positive and I was absolutely in fear. I watched the torrented treasure on my computer in Snohomish, Washington. Pretty damned far from where I’d watched my first episode in Pennsylvania. The episode started with the theme… and I was young again. I was in love again. It wasn’t ‘My Who.’ It was what as a child I always thought it looked like. But now through adult eyes, it too had grown up.

The writing on the show had grown up. Oh, sure there was the occasional episode that was more groan than grown, but that was forgivable. The characters had more dimensions than the time stream had in the 70s. But above all else… I could celebrate my fandom in the way that only a geek could.

T-Shirts.

On more than one occasion, I’ve tried to cull my shirts in order to make a big graphic post about them. Knowing my penchant for dropping effort like that on the floor, I simply resisted. At this point I estimate my complete “Who Shirt” collection to be about 20. Honestly, considering what is out there now… this is paltry.

Today, I’m going to write about the exact opposite of this topic. As more an more internet venues appear for merchandise (official, unofficial, and fan created) there is a wealth of shirts available. Unfortunately, not all are worth considering. Sadly, some are downright… well…

I’m going to give my opinion… Take it or leave it as you will…

Today, I want to focus on an offering from Blue Box Tees. I’ve purchased from them in the past so I’m not trying to cast derision on their company. They offer a program where you submit art (Doctor Who for that site, other art at other sites owned by them), you receive $1.50 for each shirt they sell over 7 days at their price. And that is it. You retain full rights. Not a bad deal (but then again, I don’t make them, I buy them) Today’s art was created by Zerobriant. Zerobriant has a LARGE gallery of fan art at Red Bubble. You can also look at the Zerobriant blog and a whole slew of other references under any simple net search. I’ve also purchased shirts with Zerobriant’s work in the past. I own a copy of “The Who’s” which I think is absolutely brilliant. So no personal attack on the artist.

That being said… I’m very unhappy with the offering on Blue Box by Zerobriant of “The Last Centurion” (Pictured above.) Okay, I get it. It’s a send up of a style done many times over. Heck… It’s even got it’s own listing on TV Tropes. They call it “The Leg Cling” which honestly I think was best done for “Army of Darkness.” So, what’s the problem then? The art is good, it’s a send up of a style…

Well, the problem is it’s neither. First the artwork. Amy is Amy. Zerobriant has proven time after time very good at drawing Amy. Not just her features, but her character as seen in “Come Along Pond” But that’s about where this attempt ends. Rory is an unmitigated disaster on several levels. The face is unrecognisable. Arthur Darvill has some very striking features that stand out. The character on closer examination looks closer to Christopher Eccleston. We add to that the cloak which seems to have been manufactured by the same person who worked on several Batman films, but more specifically Alec Baldwin’s “The Shadow

But really gets me here is how poorly chosen the style is concerning the characters. (Here be ye spoilers)

And more spoiler space

And then some

That’s your warning.

Say what you will about the Ponds. Like them, hate them, love them, lose them. Amy Pond is not the type to throw herself at the feet of her man when he shows off his bravado. To see Amy nigh-supplicant to the Centurion is complete disservice to not merely her, but both of them and their relationship. This is the woman who hand-cuffed the doctor, destroyed herself on multiple occasions to not live without the man she loves going so far as to not permit him to commit suicide without going with him. These are (likely) the first two humans to have sex on the Tardis in the time vortex. These two characters are equals. Regardless of which of them did what. It’s what makes their relationship so strong.

I don’t mind fan service to either of them, but this art comes off to me as degrading. Allow my nigh-feminism side to come out. (I say nigh, because to claim feminism as a man is to court derision)

Zerobriant has done better work and I expect will do so again. But this one isn’t it.

If I had a rating system, I would have to give this one “5 children gone mad staring into the untempered schism” Save your money, there will be more shirts on this and other sites and likely more from Zerobriant.

Yes. I am a fan. Yes. I am a geek. No. I didn’t have anything better to do.

bleah

Aside: I’m seriously thinking of renaming my blog “Poor, little-neglected bastion of rare opinion.”

Yes, this review is chocked full of spoilers. I’ve marked where the spoilers begin; so I’m going to assume that anyone who’s opinion I care about has either seen “Tron:Legacy” or will have the intelligence to Bookmark this post and come back to it after they’ve seen it.

A bit of background. Tron (The original film) came out in 1982. For the record, I was 14 and a video game addict. I had received my first computer (an Apple ][ in 1979). I as using a modem by 1980. I was writing software (Well, if code written in Basic can be called software) by 1981. You can do the math from there. The film… “may” … have had an influence on me.

It is now nearly 30 years later. I have worked for Symantec (The Norton Folk), Microsoft (who I’m under contract to say nothing bad about), and EarthLink (The no we’re not scientologists anymore folk) Of course I look less like Kevin Flynn and more like “Tron Guy” without the penchant for trying to fit into electrical tape spandex.

It should be no surprise that I did in fact go to see “Tron: Legacy” on opening weekend.

So, the short form first, then the slightly longer than short, and then I’ll draw it all out.

The short form: I loved it.
The slightly longer than short: It was exactly what it needed to be.

Taking into account that the three years of promotion for this film this film had to either hit a target or die gloriously. Granted, the three years at Comic-con (now the longest film teaser in history) was really a showcase of special effects ideas to gauge the audience, followed by a REALLY short shooting schedule with an incomplete script and a BUTT LOAD of post-production.

Spoilers lie ahead from this point.

You couldn’t simply start a fresh story. You need to know what happened to Kevin Flynn. Coming out of Tron you get a “They lived happily ever after.” Well, okay, they don’t include Dillinger who pretty much gets the corporate boot up his ass for theft, plagiarization, and corporate thievery. But not so much that his son doesn’t land on the board. (No, no plans at all for that character; unh-uh.. nope.. BTW: I have a bridge to sell you).

Flynn, was not going to simply walk away from the Grid. Now the absent father and orphaned boy thing is old. It’s tried… at times it’s tired. And of course, orphan boy grows up to be delinquent wünderkind. Yes, I’m looking at you Chris (I’m not Shatner) Pine. But hey, if they could reboot Kirk’s Girdle with the plot; why not the reboot the… (You know, I’m just not going to go for that pun. I am not going to use “Reboot” with Tron.)

When Tron came out it was bleeding edge technology being forced into a story. This time is was a story being forced into the bleeding age of technology. Interestingly, the bleeding edge wasn’t the CGI sets, backgrounds, costumes, or games. It was giving us a young Jeff Bridges.

The facial motion capture that scared children in Polar Express; that created neurotic N’avi wannabe’s in Avatar; and aged Brad Pitt in … whatever movie that was that aged Brad Pitt; attempted to give us a look back at Kevin Flynn circa original Tron. Fortunately, unlike every other film; they had source material to draw from. UNFORTUNATELY, unlike every other film; they had source material to draw from.

The de-aging of Kevin Flynn for the character of Clu (which I suppose should actually have been named Clu 2.0… Or perhaps Clu Vista due to his expectations vs. performance) has been a hotly debated thing. Actually, in all the reviews I’ve read, it’s the number one debated issue about the film. I read a lot of: “Blah Blah, plot whatever” “Blah Blah, soundtrack vs. story” “Blah Blah, action porn vs. Message porn.” “Blah Blah HOLY F*#^ Olivia Wilde is HAWT!” (okay… maybe not so much debate over that one at all)… But the one that keeps showing up is “De-aged Jeff Bridges as CLU”

You know, when one effect is what people keep talking about… I’d call that a win. So does Clu escape the ever popular Uncanny-Valley? I personally think he spends the entire film stumbling on the edge. And to me, this is perfect. The grid isn’t real. The grid is an extension of our technology and even in his box for 30 odd years, Kevin Flynn is still a genius at what he does. So, if Clu isn’t entirely ‘right’ then that fits both the story and that character.

But enough of that specific debate.

There is one issue that I would like to soap box about. Some people have said that the movie’s problem is that it should either be an action flick or a message movie. This comment really upsets me. A few years ago a film company set out to destroy a classic piece of science fiction and yet retain the name “Rollerball.” They decided that then needed to “Drop the silly political stuff” and amp up the action. Personally, I think that Science Fiction is suffering from this new trend in “Action Porn.” Let’s have a paper thin plot so people can rent the movie and then fast forward to the “good bits” Good Science Fiction is telling the human story in a fantastical world. The action parts have far more power when they are backed by the passion of a human story. I love the new “V” but I truly miss the original linking it to the Jewish Holocaust. When in doubt: Bradbury and Asimov did it right.

Yes, the plot has holes (as author Cherie Priest puts it very well) that are mighty enough to not let light escape. Honestly, to me the hardest thing to watch was realizing that Tron:2 was Highlander:3. “Well, Gosh. We’re really not sure what to do; so let’s just keep a major character on ice the entire time and then pretty much just repeat the plot of the original maybe amping things up a notch in places.”

I may have mentioned short shooting schedule with an unfinished script. Disney actually took the nearly finished product to the Docter (sic). (Okay bad pun) They took the nearly finished film to the Pixar group and said, “It may be broke, please help fix.” Disney, honestly seemed to have as much faith going ‘into’ the project as they did with the original. “Wow, you guys are really passionate, and we know there are fans, but can we make something people will actually get and help us pay it back?”

So, we over look the holes in the script and look at what there was. Aging hippy Kevin Flynn. Bridges was the best thing in this movie hands down. Digital Clu was annoying at places but it fit as a reflection of a young hippy genius that’d had a mild taste of megalomania. Aging Flynn was even better. You could honestly see the childlike joy of the original Kevin Flynn tempered by sadness, loss, and an effort to make peace with his condition.

In some ways, I sort of look at this film as tied a little to Much Ado. Hero and Claudius are pretty much wood. While watching the dance between Beatrice and Benedict is where the real meat is. Okay.. the analogy makes sense in my head. Sam Flynn is one of those characters that probably could have been played by any of the current beau-hunks that are out there. I think Chris Pine was even considered for the role. Olivia Wilde… yes, she was poured into the outfit and is one of the current hot women out there. I’m a geek, I think I would have of course preferred Summer Glau. Because she will always kick ass better than any 10 female actresses out there except perhaps Helen Mirren in RED. But I waaaaaaay digress.

Now, the new characters worth mentioning: Rinzler and Castor/Zuse. I managed to not be spoiled. (Yes, big spoilers coming) Despite being a fan of Tron; despite having seen the film countless times; despite owning in on DVD… I utterly missed the fact that Rinzler had a T on his chest. I was completely surprised. But then again, I LOVE it when the obvious is right in front of you. I missed that Quorra was an Iso. I was there to enjoy the ride and not think. I let the story (what there was of it carry me) Rinzler was a great example of helping to clarify plot issues including some that go back to the previous film. The colours and the concept of “Repurposing a program.” I enjoy when information makes me want to rewatch a film or especially its predecessor. Rinzler’s redemption is fantastically paced and really whets the appetite for another film. (Perhaps even further misnamed “Tron”)

Castor/Zuse. My incredible spouse, wife, life-partner, socially conscious goddess the @livingartist pointed out to me a major flaw with this character that I absolutely agree with. In “Tron”, director Steven Lisberger admits to being guilty of “casting a Brit as a villain.” This type of British=Evil mentality of American filmmakers is the top contributing reason that actor Terrance Stamp left the American industry. Remember Terrance Stamp, from General Zod to Bernadette in Priscilla, Queen of the Desert.

Castor/Zuse is the current incarnation of this. The current incarnation is however (I feel) far more dangerous. Now the turncoat/morally ethical character is also flouting gender norms. Yes, Castor/Zuse is “Male” but flamboyant, eccentric, and a touch effeminate; and as a result… not really trustable. This is occurring in several mainstream films (Fifth Element). Apart from that major glitch… the entire, “I’m the big guy’s right hand… oh wait; I’m the rest of the big guy too.” I really hate that. That’s the kind of thing that needs to be set up for at least half a movie to have any worth.

The film was made (like all good reboots) for bringing in new people and appeasing the old fans. There are so many nods to the old film that you really do have to watch it twice to catch them all. It was said that you need to get this on BluRay just to catch all the Easter eggs in Flynn’s office and Sam’s boyhood bedroom. (Yes, I had the light cycle pillow) There was even a big door (though not as big as the original one.) Also, watch for the “Dumont” sign over Sam’s apartment. I think the only thing missing was a “Ram” tribute somewhere in the Grid.

One person on twitter said the only improvement they’d make to the grid was a random character walking around saying, “HELLO WORLD” to everyone they met. I like this.

In general, this film gives the hope that with a good script (Paging Mr. Whedon or 80% of the staff at Pixar) that a Tron film can now come out that has the technology and the story to give us something that will last for a VERY long time.

Was it too deep or bloated in placed? Sure. Was it pretty with a fun soundtrack? Sure. Was it a sleeper that people will go see and likely go back to and then buy on DVD. I think so. With a budget of $170(M) and a Gross of $258(M) in under 25 days. I think we can pretty well expect another installment. This time we probably won’t have a 30-year wait.

Kudos Disney and Joseph Kosinski

Final rating time. (And not just because I want the extra 50 words to round me out to a 2,000 page book report) See this in the cinema. See it on the big screen. The BIG, big screen. This film has specifically been designed to take advantage of the IMAX ratio, digital 3-D projection and surround sound system. See it multiple times and take others to see it.