

They had me at the trailer. For weeks now, the previews for "Tron: Legacy" have offered a striking look at what digital-age decor could look like. Though the film, which opens this weekend, unfolds in a virtual landscape know as the Grid, it also features the midcentury childhood home of hero Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges) and a modern house made from shipping containers where Flynn's son Sam (Garrett Hedlund) lives. The most dazzling interior by far, however, is the Safehouse, above, a glowing hideout at the edge of the "Tron" universe.

Production designer Darren Gilford described the Safehouse by e-mail as "a hideout of Flynn's own design. The vibe of the space is a calm, serene self-imposed prison where Flynn has resolved to spend the rest of his digital life."

That is, of course, until Flynn's son Sam is Tron-sported into this digital world and uses the Safehouse as his secret lair.

The space, right, is furnished with timeless designs including the Barcelona chair by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, the 670 lounge and ottoman by Charles and Ray Eames, and the Arco lamp by Achille Castiglioni, which are accented by updated versions of 18th century French antiques.

These recognizable design elements are inspired by Flynn's distant memories of the real world, Gilford said. "Because Flynn is originally human, and he has the ability to create his own exiled environment, we chose these familiar furnishings to showcase his personal aesthetic." Look closely, he added, and you'll notice that these classic elements have been "tweaked into the 'Tron' design language."

Almost everything in the Safehouse glows. The main floor is composed of 6-by-6-foot illuminated glass panels set on a massive steel structure conceived by supervising art director Kevin Ishioka and construction coordinator Jan Kobylka. Each panel was rigged so its up-lighting could be controlled independently. The Rococo-style furniture by set decorator Lin MacDonald was constructed from acrylic that took weeks to make using computer-run milling machines.

"Lin also ingeniously incorporated thin rope lights into strategic troughs inside the acrylic parts, which makes them appear lit from within," Gilford said.

Keep reading to see that glowing furniture ...