Pop Culture Happy Hour - TRON: Ares And What's Making Us Happy

Episode Date: October 10, 2025

TRON: Ares is the third film in the franchise, and this time flips the script: Instead of humans entering the digital world, this movie sees human-shaped artificial intelligence programs entering our ...world. Starring Jared Leto, Greta Lee and Evan Peters, is TRON: Ares an upgrade from the previous movies?Follow Pop Culture Happy Hour on Letterboxd at letterboxd.com/nprpopcultureSee pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:04 Call it a soft reboot. Tron Ares is the third film on the Tron franchise, but it's not a direct sequel, so you can go in pretty clean. What's important is that it flips the script. Instead of humans entering the digital world, this movie sees human-shaped artificial intelligence programs entering our world. It stars Jared Leto as an AI soldier, Greta Lee as a CEO trying to save the world,
Starting point is 00:00:27 and Evan Peters as a CEO trying to 3D print an army or something. I'm Glenn Weldon, and today we're talking about Tron, Aries on Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR. Joining me today is Jordan Cruciola. She's a writer and producer and the host of the podcast Feeling Seen on Maximum Fun. Welcome back, Jordan. Thank you so much for having me on the occasion of Tron. On the occasion of Tron.
Starting point is 00:00:49 Wouldn't think of anybody else. Also with us is the co-host of Slate's ICYMI podcast and former pop culture happy hour producer Candice Lim, showing her face around here. Hey, Candice. Hi. Hey. All right, let's get into it. In Tron Ares, Greta Lee is Eve. She's a programmer trying to bring objects from the digital world into the real world to help save lives.
Starting point is 00:01:12 The problem, digital objects can't survive in our world longer than 29 minutes. Meanwhile, a rival programmer, played by Evan Peters, is using the same tech to bring digital objects into the real world. Only you can tell he's evil because instead of food sources and disease cures, he's bringing tanks in lasers and light cycles. And here is the real issue. AI soldiers. These include the by-the-book badass Athena, played by Jody Turner Smith, and the soulful, broody questioning his programming ares, played by Jared Lutto. Peter's evil programmer wants to ensure that his 3D printed armies can survive past the 29-minute threshold,
Starting point is 00:01:49 so he six his soldiers on Eve, who has finally found the secret, the so-called permanence code. Tron Ares is in theaters now. Jordan, kick us off. What did you make of Tron Ares? I had a fun time at Tron Aries. I love Tron. This is like the height of visual cool to me. So what I needed from Tron Aries was to look like Tron. And it looked like Tron.
Starting point is 00:02:17 And listen, I've never been a Jordan Catalano girlie a day in my life. And that guy's still doing that thing, whether he's being a human facsimile or he's being a human himself. We're talking about Jared Letto here. Yeah. The Jared Letto of it all, like the broody thing is that's never a my thing. So I'm going to rely on all the other parts of this movie to pull me through. And thank God. Jody Turner Smith was the icy program reconciling with their possible desire for further sentience.
Starting point is 00:02:45 And the Tron of it all looked super cool on and off grid. So I got what I needed out of a Tron. And for I think maybe the first time ever I will sincerely say, don't skip the 3D if you have the chance. see this movie in a theater and the 3D I thought it worked I thought it was a value ad and again
Starting point is 00:03:07 I think it's the first one I've ever said it in my life so technical wizardry crushed it for Tron Ares got it okay Candace what's your relationship
Starting point is 00:03:15 with this film? I love Tron Legacy the 2010 sequel very very much it's a sick movie daft punk electric it's kind of like
Starting point is 00:03:23 divergent in Hunger Games but a little bit more for the techie side my whole thing is like if you're the type of person who Google maps their entire route to dinner just to know where to park you like Tron because there's kind of this...
Starting point is 00:03:36 It looks like a map, right? The grid looks like a map. You know, with this movie, I was really excited to watch it and I like it for what it is. I have a feeling not sure everyone will because, look, I can pretty much pinpoint the moments
Starting point is 00:03:49 that either won't make sense or the lore will kind of make people zone out. But this movie feels very big. Probably the biggest of the three because it's a lot more like marvellous. and actiony than like small nerdy sci-fi tech thriller. For example, I just kind of feel like they brag about how much like urban infrastructure they're destroying in this movie, but that's that.
Starting point is 00:04:09 Yeah, that's certainly true. But I actually think that this movie very much falls in line with two other releases, which is Megan 2.0 and Mission Impossible, The Final Reckoning. There's something about the way that all three of these movies are trying to say something about like AI entities interacting with our world that I find a little troubling, but I think still back to the franchise. Like, Tron Aries does reinvigorate what I love about the franchise. And I think for right now, my ranking still is though like Tron legacy, this one.
Starting point is 00:04:39 And I got to be honest, I hate Tron from 1982. I know. Oh, man, I love Tron. I'm still original legacy, love legacy. And then this one is like a not begrudging third. Right. And like not, I'm not mad at it third. All right.
Starting point is 00:04:51 This look you see in my face, folks, is bemusement because I got to say I got no light cycle in this race. As a nerd, it feels very weird to me to have a big sci-fi franchise, because I have real questions about how popular this franchise is. We'll talk about that. But it's weird for me to have this sci-fi franchise out there and have it miss me as completely as this one has over the years, especially when you consider that when that first film came out, I was literally a 14-year-old boy. I was a 14-year-old indoor kid, and I felt targeted by it, but it missed me completely. I didn't see it in theaters for reasons I can't remember. I tried to watch it on VHS many, many times, fell asleep every time, couldn't tell you why. And let me tell you, I hate this feeling.
Starting point is 00:05:32 I don't like feeling as emotionally disconnected from anything that has this many lasers and flight mecks and pew, pew, pews in it. Because I don't want to feel like my parents, but here we are. I saw legacy that thing slew his stuff in my brain the moment it ended. And as we tried to explain to listeners in the intro, you don't need to have, really. It's set in the same universe. It is a new story with new characters. Some of them are literally related, like genetically related to previous characters and previous films. But it's off doing more or less its own thing.
Starting point is 00:06:07 Now, I will say that the thing it's doing has been done better elsewhere. What it's doing is grappling with what it means to be human in what I consider a very by the numbers kind of way. But it's doing it while pelting you, hurling Easter eggs at you, whipping them at you like it is a disgruntled Peter Cotton Tail. hopping down that bunny trail. Like they are an identity disc and you are doing battle. For example, at one point in this film, an OG from the first film, Light Cycle makes its appearance. Yes. And when that happened in the theater that I was in, it got one sad, lonely woo.
Starting point is 00:06:44 And when I heard that, I was like, well, good for you. If you see yourself in the cohort of people who would woo at the sight of a light cycle, run, do not walk to this film. This film was made for you. But I heard that woo, and I was like, I'm happy for you. Also, who are you? Can I study you? Because it is certainly my impression. Here's where we get to it that this franchise has not left a huge cultural footprint, but I'm old and tired.
Starting point is 00:07:11 Maybe there's things I don't know about. Maybe there's, like, there's a book talk. Maybe there's a Tron talk. Maybe there's folks trading, spicy S&M, Tron fanfic and calling it master control. And if there's shays and there should be spin classes with light cycles. They should do that. That's true. Both of you tell me how is this a thing?
Starting point is 00:07:31 People don't talk about this franchise when there's not a movie in theaters. And I would argue not even much when there is. No, Glenn, I'm shocked. When we got the Tron Aries teaser, I was like, they really did it. Like, because I love the original. Like, I don't know many people who are a big enthusiast for Legacy like the original. And I really liked Tron Legacy. And I remember I worked at Wired at the time.
Starting point is 00:07:53 And we did a, obviously, if there's in a movie that Wire or, is going to do a movie cover on. It should be Tron. And it was this big package that we did, Legacy Light Cycle on the cover. But it has been one of those beloved in the aftermath. The internet has found its home with Tron Legacy.
Starting point is 00:08:12 And the trailer got here. There were elements of it where it was like, whose Madlib was this for Tron? And then it was like, nine-inch-nail score. It was like, all right, clock it in. Like, give me the grid, give me the score, give me the suits.
Starting point is 00:08:24 But it was, as somebody who loves this stuff, I don't know where they decided this was a great value proposition. I'm so glad they did. I don't think they're right. But I'm glad I got to look at another Tron. I kind of want to talk about why Tron as a franchise just has never hit at the right time, but also why I love it. So like the first thing is one of Tron, 1982's biggest advocates, is this random ass guy named Roger Ebert. Heard of him.
Starting point is 00:08:47 Heard of him. In 1982, Ebert was four out of four stars on the first Tron movie. And his whole thing as he was just like, it is beyond us. The way that Charlie X-CX has always been beyond society. And at some point, at some point, Brat, society caught up with Charlie. And at some point, Tron, 1982 became like this cult classic. And then Tron Legacy 2010 comes out. I really liked it just because I think it was very different in terms of the type of dystopian
Starting point is 00:09:16 culture that I was being flooded with at the time. I think what I liked about that movie, too, is just that it wasn't always about the digital technology and the infrastructure, because that movie is about, like, a son looking for his father in the grid. It's about biodigital jazz, man. Sure. However, guess who also didn't love that movie as much? Ebert. He literally was like, that's a three out of four.
Starting point is 00:09:37 This isn't killing. But I think the thing is, like, I feel a lot of love and, like, affection for this franchise because I have this feeling that Tron exists in this almost, like, to the left of, like, the Star Wars, Star Trek. Even sometimes it gives me like Jumanji vibes of like it's the whole point it's kind of supposed to be for the ones who are left off the grid. To me, to me. And I count myself as one of those people. However, the question now is like, we're in 2025. This is one of those films that they don't make a lot of, which in a weird way I like, but I think business wise to them it does not help.
Starting point is 00:10:10 Because they're like, look, if we could turn Tron every two years, we're going to turn Tron. The question is who wants to. That one random guy. I think that's a great point of what you're saying is like that it doesn't come around every two years is like, I'm I think a nice thing about it, but it is also that it doesn't come around every two years. It competes with all these other things that seem to. And that hobbles its chances when it's like, these movies are big and flashy and expensive. And this is like the third time that this massive conglomerate has kind of gone back to the well in it.
Starting point is 00:10:40 And it feels like a passion project to me, I guess. And I agree with you with Legacy. The thing that I couldn't shake when I was watching when I was trying to figure out the first time I watched it through if I liked it was like, it's so sincere. I can't not. And I think that was the thing I mean. missed in Aries is I enjoyed myself as a pretty time at the movies and it was a cool experience. But like that real sincerity, it was getting at that with what gets to go on with Greta Lee's character. But like I actually wanted more of the Flynn journey from Greta Lee's character.
Starting point is 00:11:11 And I don't think it would have been retreading the same ground. I think it would have been getting at the emotional strength of how this franchise has actually really connected with people. Yeah. Okay. Well, it's gesturing toward some kind of emotional center with a relationship between the Greta Lee character and her dead sister, which is not a spoiler. It's right there in the beginning. But we've already touched on this, but Disney, here's how you do not entice me into a franchise I
Starting point is 00:11:32 haven't cared about for decades by making the face of a Jared Letto. This guy brings absolutely no arc to this character. Now, the character on paper is a cipher whose arc is the whole movie. He achieves sentience. Then he achieves empathy. Then he achieves altruism. That's big, but nothing about this performance. Nothing in his affect changes from the first moment we see him to the end.
Starting point is 00:11:58 This character starts the film giving big dirtbag energy. He ends the film giving big dirtback energy. He is a heat sink of charisma. He gives nothing. He takes a lot. Talk about the letter of it all, please. My favorite category of performance in anything is person playing robot playing person. Like, it is so difficult.
Starting point is 00:12:18 There's so much subtlety that has to go into that without becoming like, a parody of just being a droid who is like clunking their way around and misunderstanding any human condition. What you see in the little business of what Jody is doing in her performance, it seems like that sort of like one-note marching robot until, because she also has an arc, Athena, her character also has an arc. When you see her start to change, even as a supporting character, you see the effect of what those changes have on her as opposed to playing at one note the entire time.
Starting point is 00:12:49 and the direct contrast of those two security programs, he's master control and she's a subset program, working alongside each other, I was like, they're doing the exact same thing, and I'm getting so much less time with her, and she's giving me so much more. So there is an example of how you can actually pull off a lot with a little bit in that framework of performance,
Starting point is 00:13:08 and it was such like a negative foil for him that I was seeing it so well done from her again in a fraction of the screen time that I was like, well, would have been cool if she was master control, I guess. No, you make this film about her. You fix this film, I think. Yeah. From a story level.
Starting point is 00:13:23 That would have been cool. And from a performance level. One thing I do really love about the Tron franchise is that it doesn't overcomplicate who is the hero. And it does not really overcomplicate the narrative of the hero's journey. It's very simple, right? The first movie is Jeff Bridges, the second one is his son. My thing with this movie is I could not figure out for like two acts who was the real hero. And the thing about the Tron franchise is the hero is the person who is usually thrust into the grid by accident.
Starting point is 00:13:47 Greta Lee like gets thrown into the grid. She doesn't stay there for long. But it is Arias who ends up like going into the grid and like having conversations with like interesting people, whatever. And my whole thing is if Aries then becomes, you know, the hero of the film, are we rooting for him? Therefore are we rooting for AI? And that I did not like. Interesting. My biggest issue with this movie, Megan 2.0 and Mission Impossible Final Reckoning is that we now have these three huge studio movies.
Starting point is 00:14:17 that are trying to have nuanced conversations about AI, but they are not taking firm and off sides or they're being generous. And I think, especially in a film where Greta Lee is not just like a regular citizen, she's a CEO. Like she is like actually powerful and rich. She's flying in on a private jet. Like the sympathy that they have for the people who control AI's like destiny in these films is a little too wishy-washy waffling for me.
Starting point is 00:14:44 These films want to touch AI, but they don't want to have like. a very firm stance on it and just like, as like a viewer, I'm just kind of like, and then like, what do you want me to do about it? Because I will say, and this is like my, this is my last sentence of it. In the movie, there is a part where Aries is given the option, let's say, to possibly choose staying himself as AI or becoming human. He's a little bit intrigued by the concept of like human emotions and like feeling rain. I won't spoil what he does. I am just saying, though, there are so many movies about AI entities trying to become more human. I'm not seeing a lot of movies about humans trying to be AI. Therefore, I say, is it possible we don't need the AI if they're all trying to be human? We already have humans. Yeah. Let's, you both talked about the look of this film and I think we have to talk about the look and the sound of this film. So this film looks slick. Everything is red and black. It's giving you serious, sinister ladybug energy. Red the blood of angry men, black, the dark of age is best. But the slickness is so reflective that I associate it unfairly, of course, with what I have recently started to think of as AI Slop, which isn't fair to the folks who work very hard on this film.
Starting point is 00:15:56 But that's just a taste thing for me. It's got this muscle car aesthetic that just misses me. But let's talk about the score by 9-inch nails. Now, every Tron film has had a high-profile composer. First one was Wendy Carlos. Second was Daff Punk. This one is 9-inch nails. the omnipresence of this score was giving me 80 films that were just a wash with music,
Starting point is 00:16:18 like Blade Runner, Legend. It was given me Evangelis. It was giving me Tangerine Dream. What did you guys make of the score? I like it, right? Like, I actually really love the Tron franchise's interaction with music because them getting daft punk to do legacy was huge. To me, I was like, Disney, that's a huge get. Because not only are you getting someone cool in the EDM space also French to, like, score your movie,
Starting point is 00:16:38 but it also kind of opened the door of, like, who can score movies? Yeah. There was a tide shift with that. Totally. And so for them to bring in nine-inch nails, I think there's a lot going on here. I like it, first of all, right? Like Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross, aka the Boys Behind Challengers, aka there was one track here that I was like, that totally is the Challenger's B-side, but I won't tell Luca. One of the first movies they ever scored was the social network. And I do find this interesting tie between social network and Tron because it's kind of about the culture of the internet, not so much the internet itself. And I like that. And so to me, I was like, this score is very,
Starting point is 00:17:12 very propulsive. It's what I expected. It's sonically propulsive. It's trying to kind of add this, like, techie sonic performance to the actual performance in the movie. I think it was kind of putting a nice magic wand over some parts where the magic may not have been giving as much as it needed to on its own. So I kind of think it was this nice trick that the movie could play to compensate for things that it didn't quite have everything of. I have in my notes, do not call this just a music video. Do not say it's just a video game cutscene because I will not be baited into doing that because for decades now, people who are older and more out of touch than me have been saying that about everything I love. And I will not be that guy.
Starting point is 00:18:10 I refuse to be that guy. I can hang with the youth of today. That said, those light cycle chases, they're kind of a music video. They were kind of a video game cutscene. Well, we came at this from very different angles, and I don't think we all agree that you should go see it. But now is the time for you to tell us what you think about Tron Ares. I say that every week, but this time I really mean it because I have no idea. Is Trana Thing?
Starting point is 00:18:30 Tell me, find us on the grid at Facebook and letterbox up next. What is making us happy this week? Now it is time for our favorite segment of this week in every week. What is making us happy this week? Candice Lim kick us off. What's making you happy this week? What's making me happy this week is a movie you're totally going to love Glenn. It's called The Wrong Paris.
Starting point is 00:18:50 Okay. So this is a Netflix movie. Stay with me. Came out last month. It stars Miranda Cosgrove. That's my girl. She's from my Carly. And she plays this farm girl who basically wants to go to Paris to study art, but she doesn't have the cash to get there.
Starting point is 00:19:05 So she signs up for this like bachelor-type dating show. They claim that their season's going to be filmed in Paris. The thing is they don't say which Paris. So they're not in Paris, France. They're shooting in Paris, Texas, aka near her hometown. However, she's trying to get off the show. She's scheming. She's trying to be like a dud.
Starting point is 00:19:20 And then she finds out who the suitor is. and he's kind of into her, she's kind of into him. I'm kind of into the movie because it reminds me of Unreal. Do you remember that show where it was kind of like, keep behind the scenes,
Starting point is 00:19:31 kind of this darker version of what it's like to really make a show like The Bachelor. And I actually think this kind of hits on very similar tones and like moments. And I have to say, I think this is probably
Starting point is 00:19:42 the best Netflix rom-com I've watched this year because it's like cute and it doesn't drag. So I think this is very perfect Friday, Saturday night, watch at home. pad tie on lock.
Starting point is 00:19:53 There we go. There you go. That's the wrong Paris. You can find it on Netflix. All right. Thank you. That is a recommendation. I don't take rom-com recommendations often unless it's from someone I respect who gets it.
Starting point is 00:20:05 So I'm going to check it out. All right. Thank you very much. Candice Lim. Jordan Cruciola. What is making you happy this week, pal? The thing that's making me happy this week is Taylor Swift's new album, the life of a showgirl. Heard of it.
Starting point is 00:20:17 Despite the fact that nothing makes Swiftie's more upset than a new Taylor album. as you might think from watching the internet react to it, but don't believe what you heard. Okay. This is another really good Taylor album. It's not my top Taylor album, it's another really good Taylor album. Opelite, one of the best songs she's ever done.
Starting point is 00:20:34 The actual last track, Life of a Showgirl, really excellent stuff. Cancelled, it's going a little far for me. I could leave that track off. Wood makes me actually blush too much to almost finish the song because I feel really uncomfortable hearing it. But other than that, the rest her hits, and this is Taylor and her ever last,
Starting point is 00:20:52 incisive singer-songwriter condition. Guess what? She's good at her job. She's done it again. And the life of a showgirl, particularly in the car, is making me very happy this week. All right. Good to hear. Here's hoping that we can get the PCH bump for that plucky little upstart.
Starting point is 00:21:06 Taylor Smith. Needs all the help it can get out here. Needs all the help she can get. What's making me happy this week is a film called Play Dirty. It is a nasty little heist film that recently came out on Prime. Here's where I say that Amazon supports NPR and pays to distribute some of our content. but I would be recommending this film even if they didn't because it's directed and co-written
Starting point is 00:21:25 by Shane Black, who did Kiss Kiss, Kiss Bang Bang and the Nice Guys. I love that. It's based on the Parker novels by Donald E. Westlake. I love that. It stars Mark Wahlberg. Did I mention I love the Parker novels by Donald E. Westlake. Look, this isn't revelatory, but it's very solid. It's also
Starting point is 00:21:41 very violent and it's a little funny. Sometimes the stunts look a little CGI weightless, yes, but you got Tony Shalub, you got Lakeith Stanfield, you got Kagan Michael Key, Key. Walberg isn't giving you a lot, but the character is written to be kind of a cipher, so that kind of works too.
Starting point is 00:21:56 There are some Mr. X, some very heisty Mr. X that got me. Look, if you like heist movies, you've got a Saturday afternoon to kill. You can start it with the wrong Paris on a Friday night and then on Saturday afternoon. You could do a lot worse. That is Play Dirty on Prime. And that is what's making me happy this week.
Starting point is 00:22:14 If you want links for what we recommended, plus some more recommendations, sign up for our newsletter at npr.org slash pop culture newsletter that brings us to the end of our show. Candice, Lim, Jordan Coorsher. Thank you so much for being here. Thank you for having us. Thank you. This episode was produced by Mike Katzif and Jene Morris
Starting point is 00:22:30 and edited by our showrunner, Jessica Reedy, and Hello, Kim, and provides our theme music. Thank you for listening to Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR. I'm Glenn Weldon, and we'll see you all next week.

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