• wjrii@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    16
    ·
    3 days ago

    Dear Jordan Catalano, Angela is not as into you as she thought.

    Also, for Tron Ares specifically, I know that I am instantly turned off the moment a franchise that mostly exists in another world/dimension/etc. decides it’s going to do something in “the real world.” I know Tron isn’t as bright-line as other IPs, but the appeal is still largely in seeing how the inside of computers and networks is anthropomorphized and analogized into an alternate universe that comments on contemporary anxieties about technology. Nobody was asking to see light cycles and recognizers in LA.

    • aGlassDarkly@piefed.zip
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      2 days ago

      This was what turned me away from it, too. I loved the first one as a kid. I enjoyed most of the sequel(?) as an old person.

      There’s a shit-ton more they could do in that universe, a place that seems to offer escapism from reality but comes burdened with its own conflicts that parallel ours — conflicts that are solved, largely, if I’m remembering right, through self-sacrifice in defiance of money-grubbing capitalists and power-hungry rogue-program autocrats.

      There’s a lot of hope in the two movies; I didn’t get that feeling from the trailers for this one and will probably be skipping it.