MovieChat Forums > Tron (1982) Discussion > Why do some people complain this movie i...

Why do some people complain this movie is hard to follow?


With the release of the new Tron, I've been trying to show this movie around to friends who haven't seen it so they can see the new one and be caught up. The main complaint I hear is that the film is hard to follow.

Is straight forward, point A to point B story telling where everything is handed to the viewer on a silver platter too much for people nowadays? This is the furthest thing from a film where thought is required, and yet it seems to confuse people.

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I agree. I fail to see what's difficult to understand. I thought this movie was innovative and ahead of it's time as far back as the late 80s/early 90s (I'm not old enough to have thought all that when it came out).

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I think people find it hard to follow because it is a shallow movie. There is no 'reading between the lines' like most films. If anyone who's confused about it is told that it's shallow, they'll know exactly what the movie was about. I'll admit it myself, I was waiting for something to happen, and it just didn't happen.


The Greatest Thing You'll Ever Learn Is Just To Love And Be Loved In Return

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You think there's no subtext? It's got it's problems but I think there's something intriguing about a computer world where the programs bear resemblance to their creators, physically and emotionally, and there's water.

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I was totally unsure about the motivations for the characters and what was literally happening on screen half the time. Incredibly hard to follow, and I'm a Film Studies major.

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I know a bit about computers but I am no genius. I think the main reason it is hard to follow is because it is somewhat of a slow and boring movie at first. I was lost most of the way through the movie trying to understand what the point of it all was. Obviously I understood he was sucked into a game and is forced to fight for his life with the help of some friendly programs written by their "users" but even still, the point of the movie is skewed. It seems more like an endless maze of the characters having no ultimate goal and just blindly following any path thrown to them. I would say that it is the writers faults.

On top of all that I saw the sequel first...so I had to grip the major differences between this film and that one. Correct me if I am wrong. Flyyn is somehow inspired by the events in this movie to make "The Grid" 7 years later with the same characters only instead of building a game, he builds a digital civilization which takes on a mind of its own.
I could see back in the 80's this being a spectacular film. But to standards today, it is very dull.
Jack Shephard "You disrespect his memory by wearing his face but you're nothing like him."

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I think people are just dumb though, that might be the issue.

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^^ pretty much this

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I remember thinking it was hard to follow when I first saw it in 1982. I think a biggest reason is so many of the characters look basically the same except for the black and white image of their face. The inconsistent coloring mentioned in the trivia doesn't help that either. There was also a lot of poor transitions due to the limitations of the technology and some odd scenes like the gridbugs that didn't go anywhere. Watching it now it's not confusing, but that's because I already know the story.

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I wouldn't say that it's hard to follow the plot, but yes, I found it hard to follow because of its graphic simplicity. It's abstracted to the point of the viewer needing to use their imagination to fill in the blanks, and I agree with the above comment about the characters sometimes looking similar.

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That why I liked this movie, it's very easy for a kid to follow (good vs evil), and yet there is much more going on if you think about it (the program's religious belief in the users, people and programs deep down being alike in some ways, programs and users just wanting freedom and justice, the user has special powers over then programs).

I wouldn't say it's hard to follow unless the people watching it are more the partier types than that want to drink and talk more than watch (yes, I know a few people like that).

It's much easier to follow that the Matrix 2 and 3.

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[deleted]

Programs are written by users. You really want to know why users/programmers want the freedom to run their programs and not be controlled by an authoritarian power structure? Are you serious? Why do people prefer an open internet to AOL? Why do people prefer the USA to the old USSR?

Yes some people like to be controlled, but computer programmers aren't one of those groups, and that's very clearly explained in the opening narrative.

If you don't understand why freedom is good then that says something about your priorities. The movie itself does a good job of explaining why the MCP is the bad guy.

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[deleted]

Without users/programmers, there is no program/subject, or any purpose or function for them to perform or any will to wish to be free from. Programmers/users are the heart of the whole conflict in this film. In that light, I think it is clear that you are only noticing half of the subtext.

I still believe. Do you still believe? - Earl Hickey

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