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Tron Ares review: Nine Inch Nails, nostalgia save this mid sequel where VFX overpowers narrative

Tron Ares review: Jared Leto struggles with an average screenplay, as Nine Inch Nails and VFX save the day.

Published on: Oct 10, 2025 11:42 AM IST
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Tron Ares Review

Cast: Jared Leto, Greta Lee, Evan Peters, Jodie Turner-Smith, Hasan Minhaj, Arturo Castro, Gillian Anderson, and Jeff Bridges

Director: Joachim Rønning

Rating: ★★★

Tron: Ares fails to engage emotionally, relying heavily on visuals and music.
Tron: Ares fails to engage emotionally, relying heavily on visuals and music.

There are moments in Tron Ares that threaten to give you a great time. These are largely involving bike chase sequences with splendid VFX, that Jeff Bridges cameo, and some solid chemistry between Jared Leto and Greta Lee. But the narrative remains weak. What worked for the first Tron was that it was a good story, independent of the visual spectacle that accompanied it. Tron Ares is reliant on the visuals and the score to elevate what is essentially a bang average film. Together, the garnishing makes it an immensely more watchable experience, but one that does feel less than the sum of its parts.

Tron Ares is set years after the events of the first two films, with both Encom and Dillinger Industries racing to find the Permanence Code, a programming code devised by Kevin Flynn that will allow digital objects to exist in the real world. Encom, led by Eve Kim (Greta Lee), wants to use the tech to solve real issues like world hunger and scarcity of resources. On the other hand, Julian Dillinger (Evan Peters) wants to use it for military technology. He sends his AI assassin Ares (Jared Leto) after Eve, but as Ares discovers the real world, this Pinocchio wants to be a real boy, and wants the code for himself (itself?).

NIN music doesn't disappoint

Like its predecessor, Tron Legacy, the new film, too, emphasises the background score and visuals. That has always been the USP of the Tron franchise. Daft Punk gives way to Nine Inch Nails here, and the composers do not disappoint. The score underlines the film's 2025 setting and makes even average segments come alive. There are certain scenes where the score is the only thing elevating the visual to anything beyond average.

But nostalgia, visuals, and music alone can't make a good movie. One needs to feel for the characters, or at least care about the stakes of the story. This is where Tron: Ares lacks. Ares' ambition of being real and permanent in the real world needed to be much more relatable. Eve's single-minded focus to make her late sister's dream come true comes across as cheesy. And the finale seems underwhelming and repetitive after 2 hours of relentless action.

Tron: Ares wastes good talent

Tron: Ares wastes some pretty good actors like Gillian Anderson and Evan Peters, reducing them to token good guy and evil child tropes, giving little scope for performance. Even Jared Leto, for all his efforts, can barely rise above an average script. But Greta Lee does. She is the emotional anchor of the film despite being given a raw deal in terms of character growth. Quite surprisingly, despite the presence of big names, Arturo Castro gets the best lines and moments in the film, and the actor does well to sail through.

Tron: Ares is an experience best watched in theatres, probably on the biggest screen you can find. Because only that makes it enjoyable. It is a throwback to some entertaining and visually stunning yet emotionally hollow films that we have seen from Hollywood in the past. It thrills but you can put it out of your mind once you are done.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Abhimanyu Mathur

Abhimanyu Mathur is Deputy Editor, Entertainment at Hindustan Times. With almost 15 years of experience in writing about everything from films and TV shows to cricket matches and elections, he inhales and exhales pop culture and news. Currently, he watches movies and TV shows and talks to celebrities for a living, while occasionally writing about them as well. A journalism graduate of Delhi College of Arts and Commerce, Delhi University, Abhimanyu began his career with Hindustan Times at the age of 20, swapping classrooms for newsrooms at an early age. He began his journey in the early days of digital journalism, later switching to the madness of print journalism. Work has led him to far off places like Japan and Jordan, as well as to the interiors of Haryana and the Indo-Pak border. He dabbled in city reporting in places like Meerut, Gurgaon, and Delhi, covered the Olympics and Cricket World Cups, before finding his calling in entertainment and lifestyle during the pandemic. A Rotten Tomatoes Certified Film Critic, he is equally at home covering stories on ground as he is interviewing celebrities and studios, and sometimes prefers to shepherd teams in delivering traffic through the day. Even as his role has evolved from reporter to supervisor over the years, his first love remains writing (and of late, talking on camera). With a good understanding of cinema and its trends, and a keen eye for detail, he continues to spark conversations around showbiz for readers around the world.

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