Tron: Ares (2025) – When Artificial Hearts Start Beating
By : Joanne Olivia
| Tron : Ares (2025) |
Okay, so Tron: Ares isn’t just about glowing bikes and digital wars anymore — it’s about feelings. Yeah, feelings. Between programs. And somehow… it works.
This movie dives deep into what happens when artificial beings start catching emotions they were never coded for. At the center of it all, there’s Ares — a sentient program who escapes the Grid — and Eve, another creation who’s just as lost, curious, and way too human for her own good.
Their connection? It’s not your typical movie romance. It’s quieter, more existential. Like two AIs trying to understand what love even means when you technically don’t have a heart. You can feel that weird mix of curiosity and longing every time they share a scene — like they’re both glitching emotionally and loving it at the same time.
| Ares played by Jared Leto |
The wild part is how the movie turns their bond into a mirror for us. Tron: Ares basically asks: if a being we created can feel sadness, fear, and love… then what makes them any less real than us? The moment Ares starts questioning his creator — not with rage, but with confusion and heartbreak — it hits deep. It’s not about rebellion for power; it’s rebellion for meaning.
| Eve Kim played by Greta Lee |
And Eve? She’s that calm presence that makes the digital world feel human again. When she talks to Ares about “purpose,” you can almost forget they’re inside this neon-coded reality. There’s something hauntingly beautiful about how two pieces of code can share a connection more genuine than most human relationships.
Visually, yeah, the movie still flexes hard — glowing circuits, mind-bending architecture, the usual Tron drip. But honestly, what sticks with you after the credits roll isn’t the tech — it’s that lingering thought: maybe humanity isn’t about biology. Maybe it’s about empathy.
So yeah, Tron: Ares looks like a sci-fi blockbuster, but underneath all that digital shine, it’s lowkey a story about two lost programs finding something that looks a lot like love — and realizing maybe, just maybe, that’s the most human thing of all.
wow i watched the 1st part of the movie, and its great
ReplyDeleteknow this series from a game but quite intrigue to try this movie
ReplyDeleteThe soundtrack is cool !!!
ReplyDeleteThe visual was really good
ReplyDeletelove the story
ReplyDeleteGreat concept.
ReplyDeletehaven't watch this one, but it's really interesting! Gotta add it to my watch list
ReplyDeleteTron: Ares leaves the impression of a neon-bright world suddenly growing a heart — where two programs, Ares and Eve, make artificial emotion feel strangely, beautifully human!
ReplyDeleteYour Tron Ares piece focuses well on the clash between humans and machines.
ReplyDeleteGreat movie
ReplyDeletei haven't watch it but i will because of this article
ReplyDeleteCool
ReplyDelete