The Couch Critics podcast

Why The Tron Franchise Keeps Missing The Mark

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Neon glows. Hearts don’t. We sat down for a triple feature of Tron, Tron Legacy, and the new Tron Ares to ask a simple question: why do these movies look so good and feel so empty? With Thomas joining the couch, we trace the franchise from its groundbreaking 1982 CGI to Ares’ timely promise of AI intrigue, then sift what sparks and what fizzles.

We give the original its due for pioneering computer‑generated imagery and changing how films think about digital worlds. Then we revisit Tron Legacy’s strongest beats—Daft Punk’s pulse, the father‑son tension, the scale that finally makes the Grid feel mythic—while calling out the bloat and recycled beats that keep it from greatness. Finally, we dig into Ares: a high‑concept setup about a program entering the real world, a cast stacked with Jared Leto, Jeff Bridges, Greta Lee, and Evan Peters, and an AI theme that should be urgent right now. On paper it sings; on screen, thin character work, flat humor, and a weightless villain mute the chorus.

Along the way, we talk missed opportunities with Jeff Bridges, why strong worldbuilding can’t carry weak stakes, and how a franchise obsessed with spectacle can reclaim its soul by centering relationships and consequences. Expect spoilers, honest scores, and a few laughs about breakfast burritos and the strange romance of light cycles. Whether you’re a Tron lifer or a curious skeptic, you’ll leave with a clear sense of what this universe needs to matter again—and why so many fans still want it to.

Enjoyed the chat? Follow, rate, and share the show with a friend who loves sci‑fi. Drop your take on which Tron film still holds up and what it would take to make the Grid glow for real.

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