movies

My Experience with the Apple TV

I've only been using the Apple TV for a few days now, but I have used it enough to jot down a few first impressions. I'll likely do a full-on review at some point in the future.

Apple TV (2010 - Black)

Some of the things I really, really like about the ATV (I have the black/2010 model):

  • Disappearing act: This thing is tiny, and it's black. I hate seeing anything besides my speakers and my TV, and the Apple TV is much better at hiding in my cabinet than my now-RROD Xbox 360. Oh, and it's silent.
  • Surround Sound, HD, Effortless: It's awesome to finally be able to stream all my movies (HD or not) from my Mac with 5.1 digital surround. So awesome. (See my article on how to rip Blu-Rays and DVDs and get them to work with the Apple TV and other devices).
  • Speed, Wireless N: Since I have an AirPort Express with 802.11n networking and a decent Internet connection, everything is fast—watching videos on YouTube, popping around the system, browsing my computer's movie and music library. Awesome.

Some things I don't like all that much, but will definitely live with:

  • You have to have iTunes and your Mac on at all times to share to the Apple TV: Hopefully Apple will find a way to sell me another device to store all my content off-Mac so I'm not burning an extra 100W when my computer is serving up content.
  • No 1080p: Not a deal-breaker for me, as I have a 720p 42" TV, but someday, I'll upgrade, and want those extra pixels.
  • Harmony Remotes don't work out-of-the-box with the Apple TV: Still takes some time to have to program the remote manually if you want everything to work correctly. Ah well.

Ripping Movies from Blu-Ray, HD-DVD and DVD, Getting them onto Apple TV, iPad, iPhone, etc.

DVD to iPhone Apple TV and iPad - Ripping

For many years, I've been in search of the 'digital nirvana,' where all my videos, songs, and photos were accessible on any device, anywhere, at any time, without having to do a complicated digital dance with wires and different sychronization tools.

I am getting ever closer to the realization of that dream... today I will introduce you to a few tools I use to help me get all my videos (be they plain old DVDs or newer high definition Blu-Ray discs [edit: I found I can even rip HD-DVDs on my Mac too!]) converted and stored on my computer so I can play them on my computer, my iPhone, my iPad, my Apple TV, my Xbox 360, a Playstation 3, and do so from anywhere in the world.

There are a few key applications you need before you can do this on your own - I'll describe the programs you need for each step of the process, and how to do everything you need to do to get your videos digitized and readily accessible.

Tron: Legacy - Firing on all ... circuits?

Tron Legacy and Original Logos - Blended

Avid fans of the original Tron (like myself) have likely anticipated the release of Tron: Legacy since the day the first hints of a remake appeared in 2008. A lot of pressure was on the Legacy filmmakers to not only keep the original sense of wonderment and otherworldliness of the first movie, but also bring the technology and ideas from the first movie into the twenty-first century.

The short version of this review is: you should see this movie. It is a great homage to the original, and it has enough digital effects, and just enough plot (just like the first one—the plot was never a strong point!) to keep your eyes on the screen.

Homage to the Old

There are quite a few images from the past appearing in Tron: Legacy. Not only do Jeff Bridges and Bruce Boxleitner return in their roles as Kevin Flynn and Alan, but we see many snippets and asides from the old movie:

  • The game grid, while much more shiny and glowing, is the same basic thing: a big arena in which different games are played by programs. In the new movie, thousands of other programs watch the carnage, Roman-style.
  • 'Dumont Shipping & Receiving' appears at the top of the shipping container-made-apartment in which Sam Flynn (Kevin's son) resides. (Dumont was the guardian of the 'I/O Tower' in Tron).
  • The matter-to-digital-and-back laser is back... though the massive equipment room that helps power the laser is gone. Flynn must've found some sort of amazing power source for the new laser, before 1989.
  • Red = bad guys. Blue = good guys.
  • A totalitarian program-dictator becomes too powerful (almost) for the user who created it to stop it (CLU).
  • BitTron is awesome, but nerdy. (The character... and also the movie).

The only regret I have is not seeing Bit (see picture on right) make at least a cameo. Bit was, of course, a bit player, but provided some great comic relief, and was probably one of the only truly brilliant computing paradigms-made-real that warmed my geeky heart.

Ringing in the New

But... this movie is in many ways nothing like the old 1982 version.

Video and audio production quality is top notch—in Tron, there were many scenes in which you could tell intercut voiceovers from the original audio, colors and textures would change from scene to scene, and the movie seemed almost B-grade in its camera work.

Flynn's Sign - Legacy HD Tron
Flynn's – now in Digital 3D!

The movie was recorded in IMAX, and I watched it in 3D, which was, I'm happy to report, a great enhancement. Rather than completely overdoing the 3D effect, as is the case in most animated flicks these days, Tron stuck to 2D for many scenes, and only used a slight 3D effect to accentuate some of the digital world from time to time. I almost didn't realize 3D was being used... which is a very good thing.

Sound and Music

The sound was also amazing—bass was punchy, in both the foley and the music. Much better than the tinny sounds of the first Tron. Throwing out the metallic/digital footstep foley from the original Tron was a very good decision.

I could write quite a bit about the soundtrack, but I'll just say that I enjoy it a lot more now that I've seen the movie. Daft Punk did a great job blending the orchestral score with their electronic style, and the tracks Recognizer, Derezzed, Fall, and TRON Legacy (End Titles) were especially impactful.

Buy the Tron: Legacy Soundtrack (Amazon.com)

I have owned the eclectic Wendy Carlos soundtrack from the original (in which she mixed in a ton of strange  synthesized instruments with bits of a real orchestra) for some time, and I have listened to it all the way through many times. I like the new soundtrack better... though in 30 years, I might think the Legacy soundtrack is just as dated.

Buy the Tron (Original) Soundtrack (Amazon.com)

Light Cycles

The glassy light trails coming off Legacy's light cycles and other vehicles are so much more amazing than the solid opaque walls that trailed the original Tron's cycles. Of course, having multi-million dollar supercomputers that are billions of times more powerful than the single rendering machine they used in '82 probably has a little to do with that. You won't be disappointed in the visual effects!

Tron: Legacy Light Cycle
New light cycles == win (this, I think, was actually from the original VFX trailer)

I'm not a huge fan of the flying machines in this Tron, and I really wish we could've seen more development on the tanks, but there are only so many minutes in an hour, and dollars in this movie's budget :)

Character Development and Plot Lines

A few notes on the plot and characters (neither of which are nearly as important as the rest of this review—see above):

  • Really, really wanted to see more of TRON. TRON is awesome.
  • Just like in the first movie, where the actual plot mostly had to do with Kevin Flynn wanting his games back in his name, Legacy doesn't really have a catchy plot. Sam Flynn wants to see his Dad, Kevin, and vice-versa (there are other storylines here... but they're relatively pointless). This movie is not about the plot... and that's not a bad thing at all.
  • References to 'cycles' ("I haven't seen that guy in a thousand cycles!" — c'mon, what?), 'deresolution,' etc. have as much foundation in real computer terminology as radishes... hopefully you're not hoping Tron: Legacy is Computing 101—or even 'Computers for Dummies.'
  • The Encom/Dillinger/Bradey storyline could've been much better. Basically, Encom was a complete throwaway storyline, just held over from the first movie to make a weak statement about open source software.

ISOs and Philosophy

Movies (and Hollywood in general) should really try to avoid dealing with philosophy in their movies. Luckily, the main storyline had nothing to do with philosophy or religion. But you could tell there was a mix of zen/spiritualism/buddhism that was being played up in a small way through Kevin Flynn. It was quite wishy-washy, but by the end of the film, viewers are made to believe 'ISOs' (Isomorhphic Algorithms) are going to save our world by ridding it of disease, wars, etc., and that coming to terms with one's self makes someone feel inner peace or something.

Something about pure code, self-creation, blah blah... who knows what the writers were thinking; they probably just needed a female bit player, so they created a hackneyed back story for Quorra, and tried to write it into the rest of the film. Luckily they didn't succeed in the latter task.

Re-viewing the Movie

This movie was well worth a few extra bucks to see it in IMAX 3D. The sound experience alone is worth it. I definitely won't watch it on any weak sound systems, as the bass has to be felt to be heard.

SolarOS - in Tron: Legacy TrailerThere are also a lot of little references to the past that you can't fail to pass up if you're a retro-geek:

  • SolarOS / sun4m /i386 (see image on right) is in use on Kevin Flynn's workstation (inside which his new digital world is built). There's actually a Solar_OS in the wild, and it looks like sun4m refers to a SPARC workstation built in 1989.
  • You can hear many of the most popular arcade games from the 1980s in the film during the Flynn's Arcade scenes: Pac-Man, Donkey Kong, etc.
  • "Greetings, programs!" spoken many times during the movie—a tribute to Kevin Flynn's line at the end of Tron, to Alan and Lora.
  • A 128K Macintosh on Sam Flynn's desk (originally made in 1984... apparently his dad didn't buy him the latest Mac on the market in 1989—the SE/30 or the IIci (both of which I've owned ;-).

Unlike most movies, there was no point at which I wanted to pull the pretzels I snuck into the theater out of my pocket—in fact, I still have them sitting on my kitchen counter. I think this take on the 1982 original is well worth seeing a few more times, and though the plot is lacking, the visuals and sound are awesome.

I give this movie two thumbs up. If there were a way to make a great plot about nerdy computer stuff, then I could maybe give the movie my 'all time favorite' status (currently reserved to Star Wars (original trilogy), Lord of the Rings, and Jurassic Park). But it's impossible, so I can't.

Thoughts on Avatar...

Not Real - Move on with your Life
Image from Geekologie

From a friend's blog post on Avatar:

People applauded at the end of the film, which I found a bit disturbing. Visually, it was awesome. But we just saw humanity slaughtered on an alien planet. We just saw the greed of humanity at its worst. We just saw a terrible spirituality exalted as ideal. And, finally, we just saw the remnant of the humans sent back “to their dying planet,” and we cheered.

No wonder people feel depressed after stepping out of the theater and back into reality. We are scum. We are parasites. We deserve to die on this rotting planet for our sins against Mother Earth.

Yet people applauded. Was it just the visuals that they were applauding? Was it the predictable love story or battle scenes? I hope so, but doubt it. Many people are not seeking the transcendent God of reality, the one whose beauty and perfection we see reflected in that awesome beauty of the real planet Earth and in the cosmos. People are not seeking the transcendent God whose truth and wisdom is reflected in our own intellect and the sciences. Instead, they are stuck with a smallness of vision and are, even if they don’t realize it, turning to the religions of environmentalism and animism. Do not weep if a tree is felled in the forest. Yes, use the forest responsibly as a precious resource given to humanity by God. But don’t worship it. Worship its Creator!

I felt the same way at the end of this film: are we so far removed from the truth that we can't see how truly good is humankind? We have dignity, and we are a beautiful creation. Pandora is a substitute reality for the divine reality, and a lot of people in our culture, who have rejected God completely, find solace in Pandora, or in an idea of 'mother nature' and the interconnectedness of beings.

Little do these people know: they can experience this oneness with creation, and this ecstatic union with the divine, simply by conversion of heart and receiving Jesus Christ!

Converting High Definition Movies to Watch on Mac/PC

NOTE: I have since written a newer article that makes it MUCH easier to do just about everything, making use of MakeMKV. The new article: Ripping Movies from Blu-Ray, HD-DVD and DVD, Getting them onto Apple TV, iPad, iPhone, etc. — I am leaving this article up for historical purposes, though, as there is some good information in here still...

This article will help you to convert HD-DVD and Blu-Ray movies to QuickTime compatible files so you can watch them in high definition in iTunes, Front Row, or QuickTime Player. The guide will also help you to be able to convert the videos into other formats so you can preserve the surround sound and the highest picture quality.

Blu-Ray and HD-DVD Logos

Converting the HD-DVD or Blu-Ray

1. Copy FEATURE_1.EVO and FEATURE_2.EVO to hard drive by decrypting them using AnyDVD, DVDFab HD Decrypter, or some other decrypter. Some DVDs use different naming schemes, but the files you need are the two largest 'EVO' files.

NOTE: I have only been able to work on HD-DVDs, so Some of the steps here don't work (or only partially work) with Blu-Ray, but I hope you can find some inspiration for getting your blu-ray files to work with Quicktime, if you so desire. Google can help you find how to get the blu-ray files ready for demuxing/conversion. Soon I will get myself an external Blu-Ray drive and start tinkering around with Blu-Ray movies... but for now I'm happy simply working on HD-DVD.

NOTE 2: I simply used the Xbox 360 HD-DVD drive, as I found one cheap locally (through Craigslist), and it works via USB 2.0. It's also quite compact! If you do so with Windows XP, you'll need to load a driver to enable support for the UDF 2.5 file format HD-DVDs and Blu-Ray discs use.

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