In episode 15, Chris and Alex log on to Tron (Steven Lisberger, 1982), a watershed moment in the history of computer animation and one that taps into the early electronic spectacle of digital visual effects within a Hollywood context. Representing the wonder of - if not the cultural anxieties surrounding - the newness of computers and virtual reality (as well as the growing popularity of videogames), the film reframes cyberspace as a complex three-dimensional fantasy world. Tron invites spectators into the labyrinthine geographies of hardware and software, asking us to marvel at a series of magical mainframes but also to speculate over what digital technology might look like, and how it could be represented onscreen.
Arrival (2016) (with William Brown)
Grave of the Fireflies (1988) (with Alex Dudok de Wit)
Dark (2017-2020) (with Nicolas Leu)
Space Jam (1996) (with Paul Wells)
Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017) (with Helen O'Hara)
The Prince of Egypt (1998) (with Francesca Stavrakopoulou)
Flushed Away (2006)
Happy Feet (2006) (with Hannah Hamad)
Inception (2010) (with Todd McGowan)
Captain Marvel (2019) (with Trixter VFX Studio)
Animated Christmas Adverts (1951-2018) (with Malcolm Cook)
James Bond Title Sequences (1962-2015) (with Ed Lamberti) (Part 2)
James Bond Title Sequences (1962-2015) (with Ed Lamberti) (Part 1)
Christopher Robin (2018)
Sherlock Jr. (1924) (with Peter Adamson)
Roobarb (and Custard) (1974) (with Birgitta Hosea)
Rango (2011) (with Neil Brand)
Bright (David Ayer, 2017)
Hugo (2011) (with Eric Smoodin)
Watchmen (2009) (with Drew Morton)
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