Tron: Ares review finds neon gloss masking a hollow narrative

Tron: Ares review finds neon gloss masking a hollow narrative

Tron: Ares lands with pristine visuals and a glossy soundtrack, but the momentum falters once the plot steps in. The film leans on neon nostalgia and 1980s callbacks, yet it rarely earns the emotional payoff it promises.

Jared Leto plays Ares, but the performance never coheres into a convincing person. He struts and intones, giving the character a robotic edge that undermines the drama. Greta Lee, taking over as Eve Kim, and Jodie Turner-Smith as Athena provide more presence, though the supporting cast is mostly shuffled into the background.

Where Tron: Legacy attempted to build new digital architecture, Ares treats the grid as décor rather than a living space. The chase on a neon jetski offers one brief jolt of excitement, but the rest of the action lands with a clinical, choreographed feel, lacking warmth or messiness.

The movie flirtations with AI as a theme—therapy for grieving or dead people—never develops into a meaningful thread, leaving the moral questions unresolved. Nostalgia for past glories dominates the frame, and the film never fully justifies its own ambition beyond style.

As a conclusion, Ares stands as a high-sheen curiosity that never quite earns its own pulse. Its most convincing human moments come from Turner-Smith, while Leto’s digital charisma wears thin in the long run.

Source: Original article

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *