Tron: NIN As Alive As We Need It To Be

Admittedly, the bulk of my hype for Tron: Ares centered around the spectacular soundtrack by industrial rock luminaries Nine Inch Nails. Not to say I wasn’t excited for another Tron movie, I totally was, but the NIN score sealed the hype.

The trilogy of movies that make up the Tron universe is all pretty weird. And that may certainly be part of the appeal. The films exist on the same server, so to speak, but they all have different vibes. The central conceit of the Tron universe is that since the advent of the computer age, there exists a parallel digital universe to our reality where programs representing data and their real-world user counterparts. Steve Jobs-esque tech CEO, certified guru-hippie Kevin Flynn, has found a way to connect to that parallel universe with haughty hopes of a digital utopia that could also inform a similar experience in reality. In general, there are defined boundaries between worlds, but each movie breaks those boundaries in specific ways to establish the central tension of the films.

Tron: Ares begins with exposition, bringing viewers up to speed on the events of the last 40 years, making direct connections to Flynn and the original story, and providing an off-ramp to largely ignore, for now, the events of the tremendously underrated Tron: Legacy. After the events of Legacy, Sam and Quorra are “off grid”. Encom is now run by the Kim sisters and rival Dillinger Enterprises is run by the grandson of Dillinger from Tron. Both companies are searching for the film macguffin, the “permanence code” which could have important consequences for earths future.

We quickly learn not much has changed from the 80s, Encom is looking for something to change the world for good, and Dillinger has far more nefarious plans, which begin and end with Ares, a security program that can exist in the real world…for 29 minutes.

Our characters begin moving between worlds with the very existence of both at stake. The movie moves at an extraordinarily brisk pace, dispensing with things like deep character development. We’re unfortunately not given much to care about. But we are given extraordinary visuals, cool ass weapons, interesting chase and fight sequences, and a throbbing, infectious soundtrack.

There’s also fun throwback sequences featuring reproductions of the original film’s then-groundbreaking computer-generated graphics.

The film also reaches for but never quite achieves its lofty, more existential aspirations - something its predecessors did a much better job at. Why are we here? Why are we? Why? and all that. Ares' awakening seems far less consequential than Quorra’s, but the film strongly hints that it is something they’d like to explore.

Tron has always been a mirror of our modern reality. Asking big questions about existence and the impact of technology on our world. Ares does an interesting job in reflecting how technology, oligarchy, and impermanence are changing our world, and has cool light cycle chases.

The movie is a mess and could have been so much more, done so much more. I walked out smiling, mostly from having Nine Inch Nails music on the loudspeakers for two hours. As a Tron movie, it’s pretty ok. As a nine inch nails delivery mechanism, it’s perfect.

Oh, and Tron isn’t even in the movie—a big miss IMHO. I’d have loved for this movie to follow up on Legacy more directly. I fear the promise of this movie to connect these two streams may not happen. And that’s a shame. Because while it’s never been perfect, Tron has always been a unique and original IP with so much promise, even if it fails to answer the big questions it asks fully.

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