Tumgik
#tron uprising season 2
sergestilesart · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Beck and his two daddies and his lady frenemy
117 notes · View notes
wynandcore · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Season 2, episode 17: Clipping
176 notes · View notes
bearpillowmonster · 7 months
Text
Tron *ahem* Ares got its first teaser image and to be honest, while I loved this concept art and thought that it took the original concepts of Tron and sort of reinvented it-
Tumblr media
I've honestly lost hope in this project from Daft Punk being done, from no word from any of the other original cast, with Cindy Morgan being gone, writers strike, development issues, Jared Leto! It just seemed like Disney flopped the bag and waited too long. I think a reboot is fine but it should've finished out the story with what they had beforehand. The only saving grace could be more games or Uprising S2
But here's the new actual new image-
Tumblr media
And it's just guh! gah!
They released a plot synopsis as well-
“a highly sophisticated Program, Ares, who is sent from the digital world into the real world on a dangerous mission, marking humankind’s first encounter with AI beings.”
I'll be honest, I thought this was an AI created image when I first saw it and didn't think much of it. I'm scared, like really scared, that Disney is going to try and use Tron to *gulp* try and change the perspective of AI and maybe even use it in the *blah* movie.
Let me break it down though, so it's not like the concept art and it does scream Legacy in a way but the triangle...the darn delta. Now I can't see the disc but it looks like it's a- well- not a disc anymore, I don't know what you call that- a boomerang, a-
Tumblr media
Yeah, that. But I also saw someone say a glaive (which would be kind of wicked, not gonna lie.) but I don't think so. That thing on his (belt?) isn't the thing either, that's his lightcycle baton I believe. Unless they're really going to try and make a lightsaber and power feeds from his bac- ok, I'm getting too into this.
But 'dangerous mission'? To what? Is Disney going to have Jared Leto hack into people's bank accounts to siphon out the money directly??? (I'm kidding, that was a joke.) But there's no telling what those lights are in the background so I'm not even going to bother but if I find out this image is AI generated AND official from Disney, I might just pop. There are other notable actors in it but I just can't get behind it yet and that's crazy coming from me, I just feel defeated that the fans and myself have said exactly what we've wanted for years only for this and while this is a change of pace and is actually something of substance, it's being acknowledged, the other side of me is still facing realization.
Wait, hold the effing phone, what the f- is this?
Tumblr media
Dillinger...
32 notes · View notes
ruethos · 1 year
Text
[gun emoji] Disney, make it up to the Tron fandom for putting Jumpluff Lotad in the third movie. Revive Tron Uprising.
2 notes · View notes
kiki-mimi222222222 · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Traitor (twice already)…
But he is doing it for bartik.
I am pretty sure, that Hopper is fully aware, that he betrayed all rebels, betrayed Tron. Yeah, Mara and Zed would be thankful for that.
2 notes · View notes
laqueus · 1 month
Text
finishing my rewatching of Tron uprising only to be once again greeted with the fact that we never got a season 2
Tumblr media Tumblr media
71 notes · View notes
drbatsponge · 10 months
Text
You Marvel and DC fans think you have it hard?
Try being a TRON fan in today's age, we have to look forward to a movie starring Jared Leto with a director who was openly a scab during the strikes.
Disney just make Uprising Season 2, I stg. 😭
160 notes · View notes
starry-saturn-nights · 10 months
Text
Had a dream last night that they made a season 2 for Tron Uprising and the first episode started by introducing Yori why is the world so cruel.
47 notes · View notes
the-sky-queen · 8 months
Text
I still can't believe there's no season 2 for Tron Uprising.
You're telling me that there was an actual uprising against Clu and you didn't finish telling us about it??? You're telling us that Tron wasn't immediately reprogrammed into Rinzler and then you're not gonna tell us how it eventually happened????? You're not gonna tell us how the uprising failed or what happened to Beck or if anyone else died or ANYTHING??????????
Dang it Disney, come onnnnnn!!!!!!!!!
24 notes · View notes
ldso-tron · 1 year
Note
I've heard that Disney cut season one of Uprising short as well as canceling the series, but I can't find a source for this. Do you have one? Thanks!
While we never got an official statement from Disney about TRON Uprising being cancelled: months after Uprising ended, someone at Disney indirectly confirmed it.
Disney XD's visually impressive and pricey animated series "Tron: Uprising," based on the films, struggled to attract the channel's core viewers of 6- 11-year-old boys. The series' tone appealed more to an older audience that isn't yet watching the channel.
"It did well with many segments of the audience, but missed some of the key demos," DeBenedittis says. "It's one of those examples where if the bull's-eye is the Disney brand, and you go into the other rings, you take some risks in missing the magic of the bull's-eye. ("Tron: Uprising" took the right risk and we created a show to be so proud of, but it hit the secondary ring of the target.")
With a sequel to "Tron: Legacy" in the works at the studio, Disney Channels plans to eventually bring back "Tron," but it may not be returning as the same show, DeBenedittis says.
Paul DeBenedittis of Disney Channels Worldwide, from a Variety.com article
There definitely were plans for more episodes of TRON Uprising. And even a "movie" between the first and planned second season.
In the post above I wrote a couple of years ago (scroll down after clicking the link), I included a video showing an animated storyboard for a first season episode that was cut.
And in another post (scroll down again), I discussed the cancelled "movie" that could have featured Daft Punk in animated form.
-TronFAQ
30 notes · View notes
saratogaroadwrites · 10 months
Text
Tron: Liberation (1/15)
Tron: Liberation | saratogaroad rating: T total wordcount: 106,965 characters: Tron, Beck, Mara, Zed, Paige, Pavel, Tesler, Clu 2, Dyson, Yori, Quorra, Original Siren Character relationships: Tron & Beck, Beck & Mara & Zed, Tron/Yori other tags: Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Canon-Typical Violence, Canon Continuation, For Want of A Nail warnings: none
The Game has changed. The Revolution has begun. With Tron healed and once more in the fight for the Grid, the war has begun. But Clu will not give up so easily, and this is a war that will be fought in the streets. But it is a war that Beck and Tron intend to win, so long as they can do one thing first:
Survive.
[AU: Fanmade Season 2]
=
Standing on the rubble high above what had once been the empty Plaza outside of Able’s Garage, Tron took a moment to breathe. To take in the hope building in his processor, and for the first time in a long time, not temper it with caution. Against all odds, they had succeeded. The mobile repurposer lay in pieces across the Plaza, Beck was alive, and the Uprising had truly begun.
And Tron himself felt free for the first time in over a five hundred cycles. Free of pain, of exhaustion that had chased his every binary string, and free of the fear that Clu would have him. His core, the stuttering feeling he’d gotten so very used to, ran smoothly with each stabilizing breath. He felt himself again. Whole again.
And he had Beck to thank for it. Brave, foolhardy, stubborn, strong Beck. Barely out of Beta and with so much potential already. Pride curled in Tron’s core as he looked down the rubble, down into the Plaza. Though some talked amongst themselves, the programs below—all fifty-eight of them—stared up the rubble towards "Tron” and his Renegade cohort. Mara, fists on her hips, stared them down as if trying to will them down through the sheer force of her glare. Since they were too high up to be seen clearly, Tron smiled faintly.
“Remember how I told you she’d still be here when you were ready?” he asked quietly, sensing more than seeing Beck look at him. “Looks like she wants you to be ready.”
As curiosity turned to a severely unimpressed look, Beck rolled his eyes. “Very funny.” He deadpanned. Tron’s smile widened a touch; for all he’d accomplished, Beck was still very much a beta. Young, foolhardy, but braver than most would have thought possible. Except, it seemed, when faced with the reality that he was going to have to lie to all of his coworkers. Again. Rezzing his helmet with a few quiet clicks, Tron gestured down the crowd.
“Come on, Tron. We need to get them out of here before Pavel comes back with reinforcements.”
He stepped forward, hearing Beck’s soft groan and the click of his helmet as his protege made to follow, but had to reach out quickly as the young program stumbled, a peripheral circuit on his leg flickering and almost disappearing into the bright whites of his suit. A clear sign of low energy if he’d ever seen one.
“You alright?” He asked softly, modulated voice echoing in his helmet. Beck nodded.
“Yeah.” Steadying himself on Tron’s arm, he stood and shook out his leg. With another flicker, the circuit’s light stabilized. “Let’s go.”
Behind his visor, Tron narrowed his eyes as Beck began the perilous journey back down to the plaza. It had been a long millicycle for them both, but where he’d been replenished in the repurposing chamber, Beck hadn’t been. And then the crash…his energy levels had to be low. But there was no time to ask after that, and Beck hadn’t come this far to be coddled every time he ran low. He knew his limits. As soon as they could, he’d put down for a sleep cycle and that would be the end of it. Shoving the concern into his low priority queue, Tron followed his apprentice down, remaining a pace behind when they finally reached the ground. Mara, still looking as angry as Yori ever had, stalked towards them. To his credit, Beck held his ground as she opened her mouth to say something, but then stopped as a sudden rumbling began to shake the ground. Everyone looked around, searching for the cause as they battled the instinct to take shelter. Some programs fell, unable to keep their footing, while others cried out in alarm.
“What is that?!” Mara yelled, Beck having reached out to take her arms and keep her on her feet. He couldn’t answer, not knowing, but as Tron looked out to the Sea his core ground to a halt. The rumbling, continuing to get worse, could only be caused by one thing at that moment in time.
The massive fleet approaching Argon from the north.
It was impossible to tell just how many ships there really were, but even from where Tron stood he could count the rows of Recognizers, the Carriers and Rectifiers. The Grid Herself was trembling, that’s what the rumbling was. Programs shouted in alarm, clinging to one another as the first ships cleared the city line and flew overhead, casting the entire Plaza into shadow. Tron glared up at a yellow lined ship, the eyesore a stark difference against Argon’s calm blue landscape, and the anger began to spin his core back up, faster and faster until all that was left was rage. His spine went stiff, fists clenched at his sides.
“Clu,” He breathed, circuits flaring in his anger.
Beck shook his head slowly. “Clu’s army.” He looked away from the fleet and back down to the crowd of programs all backing away from the rubble and towards the Garage that had once been their home. Only now Pavel controlled it. They couldn’t go back and they couldn’t go forward. Tron barely had time to look back down before the roar of engines broke into the plaza, mechanics skittering back and into one another in their haste to get away. The bikes rolled in two lines, numbers adding up until there were enough programs to encircle them and keep them contained.
Keep them surrounded, even as each solder got off his bike with disk in hand. They ignored the fleet passing by overhead as if it was normal, standing as if they were statues. Tron’s eyes narrowed as Beck let go of Mara, drawing his disk as he stood back to back with Tron.
“Ever fight this many?” He asked quietly, barely heard over the rumble as Mara held her ground, fists out in front of her as if that would hold the soldiers back. He had to give her a bit for trying.
“Not at once,” Tron replied, disk glowing in his hand. The soldiers stood tall, a wall around them and any hope of escape. But none of them moved, and Tron frowned. What were they waiting for? They had to know that neither Beck nor Tron would go without a fight, even under odds like this. Behind him, Beck shifted his weight. The mechanics clung to one another, no one daring to twitch as the line of soldiers parted. With a sneer on his face, Pavel took two steps in. For a program that had run the other direction just micros before, he seemed to have recovered his nerve. Mara took a step towards him, but Tron reached out and grabbed her wrist, jerking her to a halt before Beck could react.
“Surrender, programs,” Pavel sneered at them all, hands clasped behind his back. Tron tightened his grip on Mara’s arm as she tensed. “Come quietly and maybe the esteemed General Tesler will—”
He couldn’t finish. With a scream loud enough to make Tron’s audio inputs ring, Mara wrenched against his hold. She wasn’t strong enough to pull herself free, but she didn’t need to. Quick as a flash she grabbed at her disk with her free hand, the edge flaring Portal-bright even as she threw it directly at Pavel’s head. It was a wide, sloppy throw and the Commander ducked, the white streak of light curving above his head. It arced back into Mara’s hand and she glared at him.
“We’ll never surrender to you!” She spat, disk revving hot. Pavel blinked but then looked across the group as, one by one, the other programs drew their disks and flared them to life. Fifty-nine against all the guards would never be a fair fight, but their message was clear.
They would not be going quietly. Pavel’s surprised look fell into a cold stare. He turned to the nearest sentry.
“Destroy them all.”
And then he stepped back, leaving the sentries and soldiers to close ranks around the motley crew. They all held their ground despite shaking hands and knocking knees, standing shoulder to shoulder with their fellows. Tron let go of Mara’s wrist and she stepped aside, closer to her friends, with her disk in hand. She raised it into a defensive stance, the soldiers booted footsteps echoing as they marched closer, one measured step at a time. Tron stepped forward instead, and saw Beck do the same from the corner of his eye. He’d been on site for several fights that had seemed hopeless but had proven winnable in the end. This wasn’t one of them.
This wasn’t going to be a fight. No. It was going to be a massacre. He looked back just enough to catch Beck’s eye through their darkened visors. For half a nano Beck held his stance, didn’t so much as move…but then he nodded, just once.
And then he was gone, rushing forward in a blur of fists and feet, dual-colored disk clashing with a soldier’s in a shower of sparks. Turning away, Tron sprang forward with a growl. Someone shouted in alarm behind him but he paid them no mind as he threw himself between Mara and a soldier, catching the soldier’s disk on his own in a clash of sparks. The program startled, clearly one of the Argon contingent that had grown complacent and sloppy over the cycles of fighting Beck and his more ranged tactics, his refusal to derezz programs. It was clear that they were not prepared for Tron and his more direct approach.
With a wordless cry, Tron shifted his stance and kicked out with one foot, knocking the guard back into his fellows. Tron smirked as several more stared at him, but in the seconds that they didn’t know how to react he had already turned to Mara.
“Get your programs out of here! We’ll cover you!”
And then he turned back, ignoring their shouts of alarm as he raced forward. These programs, willful as they were, couldn’t fight the way he could. He and Beck would have to do it for them. Ahead of him, one guard called out an order—”Halt, Program!”— that died in his throat as Tron’s disk cleaved through the space between them to cut through his torso, breaking the circle that had surrounded them. As the voxels of their fallen fellow tumbled to the ground, the closest four yelled at him to stop, to surrender, but he was in no hurry to do that. He altered his course, skidding on one foot, and ran right at them, leaping to catch his disk as it returned to his hand. Suddenly aware that he wasn’t going to stop, one guard grabbed the staff from his leg and tried to hold off Tron’s advance, but it was no use. He pushed off on the landing, leaping into the air again to land on the staff, and then jumped to cleave his disk straight into the guards head. His fellows stepped back, hesitant. Tron smirked.
Behind him, taking advantage of the distraction and the opening, Mara had made a run for the Garage with three programs right behind her. Their friend—Zed—called after them, but his hands were full with a guard of his own that had pressed in from the other side of the circle. He was already stumbling back, but before he could slip Beck moved between them, catching the guards disk with barely a stumble. Zed heaved a heavy sigh as he wobbled clear, returning to his fellows to usher them out the gap that lingered in the line of soldiers while they were distracted, and Beck made quick work of knocking his target to the ground. The soldier impacted port-first and went still, lines flickering and limbs twitching from the sudden shut down, but Beck was already moving. Tron watched from the corner of his eye as he dove under a guards swing, knocking knees out and slamming another into the ground on his way.
Face hidden, Tron let himself smirk: Beck had the matter well in hand. Without another look back, Tron charged forward with a cry, leaping over the head of one guard he drove his disk into the guards neck, severing it from his body, before turning away. One particularly brave guard swung at Tron with a staff in an attempt to succeed where his comrade had failed, but Tron leaped, using the staff as a launch pad to throw his disk from the air. Four guards, including the one that had swung at him, collapsed into voxels with shouts of alarm and pain. Tron landed among the rubble in a crouch, mindlessly catching his disk as it came back to him. Already so many had fallen, but more still were coming. He could feel them approaching through the Grid, the thunder-rumble of more bikes and the hissing roar of lightjets overhead. Restored as he was, even he couldn’t fight forever. Not defending this many programs. They had to go. Teeth bared in an unseen snarl, Tron shoved himself to his feet and scooped up a red-lined disk from the mess on the ground, feeling the security code make the connection with his old routines like it had always been a part of him. The rim flared bright, blinding in the reflection of the guards helmets as he came at them like a storm. With two disks in his hands, the guards stood no chance. They tried, screaming and yelling to fall back, but he gave them no quarter. They had no chance to react, let alone run, from the two disks he threw to cleave through air and code alike. One fell, followed by another and then another, but for every two that fell there were another three to take their place.
Suddenly, Beck crashed into his back with a grunt. They both stumbled, but Tron quickly shifted his weight to keep them upright. Overhead, lightjets were dropping off their red-lined cargo, dozens upon dozens of soldiers. The only comfort was that the last program from the garage had returned to the building, the emergency shutters dropping with a screech and a clatter. Two soldiers derezzed under it, but Tron’s eyes were on the crowd around them. Stolen disk revving loudly in his hand, he watched the soldiers turn their attention as Beck shook his head.
“This isn’t working. There’s too many!” Beck gasped. Tron could feel him move, feel him look up and knew the number of soldiers he’d find. Beck’s whispered curse was answer enough. Tron narrowed his eyes.
“Where’s the nearest tunnel entrance?” He asked quietly, barely a whisper. Beck turned his head enough, and this close he could make out his frown.
“Under the garage. You don’t think—”
“It’s our best chance to get them back to the Outlands.” Even if he didn’t like it. He knew there was no way to fight these odds. The soldiers stalked closer, footsteps melding into a sound he’d last heard in his nightmares. Fighting to dislodge the memory, Tron shifted his stance. “Go. I’ll cover you.”
Beck was silent. But then he shook his head and stepped away, disk in one hand and a baton in the other.
“No.” He said firmly. Tron could barely look back before he continued, “It’s Tron they’re after. And it’s Tron they’ll get.”
Before Tron could process that, Beck was moving. He raced past Tron, dove right through the line of guards, and took off. He rolled beneath one guards attempt at a grab, pushing himself back to his feet and cracking the baton in the same instant. Code spread wide, knocking guards away as a lightjet rezzed. Beck looked back for one nano, an instant where Tron realized what he was doing.
“Wait—!”
“I’ll take care of this!”
With the whoosh of a pushed engine, Beck took to the sky. Dozens of guards followed right on his tail, rezzing their own jets and taking off in instants. About half of them joined the chase and the pursuit shifted, newly arriving lightjets taking off after Beck instead of dropping their pilots onto Tron’s head, but there were still too many lingering and coming after him! Already he could feel the exhaustion beginning to creep in, the fear that this would be a repeat of the coup so very long ago catching in his core even as he kicked a guard off his disks and flung him into his comrades. Their numbers must have been in the hundreds by now, and they just kept coming!
But then a noise came from the garage: the sound of a tank preparing to fire. Risking a look, he turned his head and stared as a blue-lined tank rumbled from the once again open garage and into the plaza, Mara perched half in the cockpit and half out. Despite her darkened visor she raised her head to glare at the guards, calling out as the tank rolled towards them.
“Get down!”
He had only seconds to react. He ducked, the blast rocketing overhead and impacting the numerous programs still in the plaza. With a burst of light and dozens of screams, they were reduced to nothing more than cubes. But even with that group falling, more came up from behind, angry and ready to derezz in a nano. Cursing, Tron dropped the stolen disk, docking his own as he ran for the tank, leaping up to the cockpit to grab Mara’s arm.
“Time to go!” He yelled, pulling her free. She cried out in alarm, the tank still rolling forward as he leapt back down to the ground. He rolled, forcing her back to her feet and to run as the tank, slow going and easy to dodge, barely slowed the guards down. He had to give her some credit: it didn’t take long for her to get the picture and she ran, boots clicking on the ground as she surged ahead to take the lead, grabbing a baton from a shelf and throwing it at him. Behind them, the tank gave way with a ground-rattling explosion that knocked programs from their feet in the same instant it made Tron’s core lurch. They were too close! Soldiers shouted for them to stop, to halt and submit, but then they went quiet. Tron turned, risking a look over his shoulder, only to find that the soldiers were now bolting in the opposite direction, back the way they’d come.
It made him stop. Mara skidded to a halt just out of reach and looked at him, startled. He didn’t look at her, but instead at the soldiers. Something was wrong, but what—the sound of a recognizer’s thrusters made him look up, just in time to see a single recognizer looming above the garage. Bright blue energy pooled between its thrusters, gathering like a storm cloud. Tron’s core froze for just a moment as he realized what was about to happen. Quickly docking his baton he lunged at Mara, knocking them both behind a repair station that still had a bike on it. She yelled in alarm, but there was no time to explain. Her cry echoed in the last instant before the Recognizer fired its horrible payload directly into the Garage. The skylights shattered, raining melting bits of glass and code around their shoulders. The lines supporting repaired jets and choppers snapped and gave way, code crashing to the ground to shatter into cubes. Mara yelled into his shoulder as he held her down, covering her as best he could. For a nano, the Grid seemed to hang. He knew what was about to happen, and was powerless to stop it. The great ball of blue energy hung above the floor for only a nano, the barest hint of an instant. Everything was clear.
And then it wasn’t. The moment passed and the shot struck home. The heat came first, then a blastwave that rattled the very airspace around it. Everything toppled, walls and personal items and docked transport units in need of repair. Soldiers that hadn’t gotten clear in time shouted in alarm or pain, falling to the ground or just plain knocked silly. With a massive plume of code dust and the screeching sound of shattering glass, Able’s garage began to collapse in on itself. Walls gave way into the now exposed tunnels; what floor that wasn’t immediately destroyed fell away and took programs with it. Lost in the destruction, Tron and Mara fell. Mara clung to his shoulders, desperate and afraid, and he didn’t try to dislodge her. Her scream and the shouts of the soldiers echoed around him, caught in his audio input as errors that he couldn’t fix. They were falling, falling, falling--
Something impacted his port. His system, overloaded, went into emergency shutdown mode.
Everything went mercifully dark.
——
If there was one thing Beck had to say about the guards of Argon City, it was that they were persistent. Three dozen lightjets had followed after him, half the force that had remained in the plaza after the massacre of their forces, and though they’d lost a dozen of their own to his fancy flying and lightwall, they stayed on his tail as best they could. Not that it was working very well for most of them; he knew the skies here, knew the towers and how to use them to his advantage. It wasn’t quite as protective as the canyon walls outside the city, and more than a couple of shots hit into buildings as he flew between them, but it would do.
Or at least, he thought as much. Quick as a flash, they dodged away only to be replaced by a squad of golden-lined jets. Not the yellow of the lead ship, but a warmer shade of yellow marked the jets that immediately opened fire, prompting him to dive and roll away. They were new! Chancing a look back over his shoulder, Beck frowned. It was hard to tell from this distance, and he had no desire to let them get closer, but it looked like all the pilots of those jets wore the same pattern. He’d only ever seen the Sirens share patterns before. So how had—it didn’t matter. Rolling again to avoid a hail of laser fire, Beck pushed on his thrusters as far as the controls would go, a burst of speed sending him out across the city. The golden jets stayed on him, dogging his every move and easily dodging his light wall. Where Argon’s guards would have turned away and gone around, these stayed on his tail, easily flying above or below to avoid crashing whilst keeping him in their sights.
So. They were smarter than Argon’s usual crop of guards. Alright, fine. He could play at that game.
Gritting his teeth, Beck banked hard, turning over a familiar section of the entertainment district. The towers were shorter here, not as easy to lose following jets in between sharp rises and harsh corners, but there was more room to maneuver and—something screamed nearby, a warning if he’d ever heard one. It caught in his audio processes, almost painful, and he jerked back on the controls in response, just in time to catch a blast of energy rocketing past. That hadn’t come from one of the jets, had it? In sheer vertical, he risked a look back. No, not from them, but from the command ship of the convoy! Its Mara-yellow accent lines flared from wingtip to stern as energy gathered at its tip, another screaming blast firing in his direction. With a panicked yell he jerked his control stick to the side, sending his jet into a sharp roll. He could feel the heat of the blast as it singed his wingtips, the four golden-lined guards quickly rolling their jets clear behind him. Though he was vaguely aware of the blast hitting one of the local towers, Beck was a bit too busy trying to level his jet to care. For a corestopping nano, it almost refused to stop spinning, but then it did and he heaved a sigh of relief, taking one quick moment to duck his head and look down.
In the end, that one movement likely saved his skin. It gave him the warning that he was about to be hit from below, and gave him the time he needed to jerk his controls back up, pulling the belly of his jet straight vertical as Pavel blew past him, the crazed program’s cackle echoing back at him. With a curse Beck threw his jet back into horizontal and poured on the speed, ducking through a gap between two buildings. He knew this city. If he could just get to the industrial sector, he could lose Pavel there. Considering how quickly the other program was chasing him, he’d need every second of lead he could get.
Of course, that was if he didn’t crash right into the fleet on his way there! How they’d moved so fast, Beck would never know, but as he came back out of the gap he had to send his jet into a dive to avoid the yellow-lined ship, his light wall cutting a slice into her belly as he flew so close he could have reached up and touched the ship. More light-jets peeled off to follow him, but Pavel was the one right on his tail, guns firing rapidly. Beck rolled, trying to make himself less of a target, but Pavel was smarter than most of the sentries and he knew how to aim.
Credit had to be given where credit was due: the Light Jets were fast, nimble, and maneuverable. They were not, however, durable. Only one of Pavel’s shots hit Beck’s engine, but that one shot was enough that the motor gave way and turned into sparkling cubes. Beck cursed hard, hard enough that Able would have grounded him, as his jet began to bank. Without the power from both wing engines he also slowed, and it was enough that Pavel crashed right into him. In a network of tinkling cubes, their jets became an odd three-winged vehicle. Pavel’s cackle was loud enough to drown out the keening sound in his audio even as he scrambled up from his controls and across, swinging his revving disk wide. Beck ducked with a hissed curse, curling to launch a kick into Pavel’s middle. The commander stumbled back, nearly fell over his cockpit, and Beck took advantage of the reprieve to leap from his controls and bring his disk up. Pavel charged again, and they clashed in the middle of their odd conglomeration of a jet. Sparks fell, lighting up Pavel’s sneering face.
“End of the line, Renegade!” He whispered cruelly. Beck’s eyes narrowed.
“Not for me, it’s not.” He shoved Pavel back as hard as he could manage, sending him stumbling again. The motion rocked the craft, and with a horrible cracking noise, the jets disconnected. With twin yells of alarm, both programs fell from the joined wing and towards the rooftop below. It was only a few seconds before Pavel impacted first, a frame-rattling thud knocking the sense from his processor. Beck barely had time to crouch and roll, every joint screaming in protest. He struggled to his hands and knees, blinking away damage warnings and quickly palming his disk. By the Grid, that had hurt. Everything ached now but there was no time to sit and nurse his wounds. Pavel was somehow getting back to his feet, yelling at the red-lined jets flying overhead.
“Stay out of this!” He shouted, disk a blazing beacon in one hand, “He’s mine!”
Clearly unwilling to risk becoming targets themselves, the red-lined jets peeled off back towards the city. In the same instant, Beck and Pavel stood up on the roof and stared each other down. The moment lasted only a nano, and then they were at each other once more. Orange met white, disks a blur of light and sparks as they clashed, dancing around the roof and barely keeping away from the edge. Flipping back from a strike, Beck barely had time to react. Pavel was just as fast as he remembered, and nearly as strong.
“I turn you in, and just think of the rewards I'll get!" Pavel shrieked, coming after him again and again. They almost danced, pivoting and spinning across the rooftop as if they had all the time in the world. Overhead, dozens of lightjets continued to race across the city, combing the streets for anyone who was still outside. None landed on the rooftop, even as Pavel leapt into the air and spun, both feet impacting Beck’s raised disk in a solid kick. The momentum sent him stumbling backwards, and Pavel lunged at him. There was no time to react: with a shout of alarm, Beck went down hard. He scrambled, getting his disk in both hands just in time to catch Pavel’s attempt at thrusting his own disk through Beck’s chest. The edges ground against one another, but even so Pavel ignored the sparks and leaned in close, almost touching Beck’s visor with his nose as he spoke.
“Your friends aren’t here, Renegade!” Pavel sneered at him, face close enough that he could count the jagged lines around the edges of a gash on Pavel’s cheek. “You’re all alone.”
“That’s good enough to take you down!” Beck retorted, kicking one knee up right into Pavel’s abdomen. The sudden attack made him jolt and stumble back, dislodging his disk and allowing Beck to knock an open-palmed strike into Pavel’s chin. Without his helmet, the Commander had left himself an easier target and stumbled back with a yelp of pain. Beck scrambled to his feet, quickly retaking his stance. Pavel shook himself, smearing a line of internal code off his chin, and raised his disk over his head for another attack. Beck stepped aside, circuits flickering for a moment. He had to end his, and fast. He stepped back in a wide circle, dodging more swipes than he crashed with. Pavel shouted in annoyance, coming after his target faster and faster, with wider and wider strikes, leaving himself open before he could strike again.
Beck didn’t waste his chance. Stepping back to the edge of the roof, he held his disk in a ready stance and waited. Pavel fell right for it, taking his disk in both hands and raising it over his head. He shouted in triumph and lunged forward, but in one smooth motion Beck sidestepped the overhead swing and thrust his elbow right into Pavel’s port. As with all programs, the pain of a port-strike would activate an emergency shut down and quickly disable all motion. It was a cheap move, one Beck hated using, but he didn’t have it in him to drag this fight out any longer.
And really, against a program like Pavel, he wouldn’t let it keep him out of sleep mode for too long. It worked, too, and with a screech Pavel went down like a sack of broken code scraps. Beck caught him by the arm at the last moment, hauling him back onto the roof before dropping him. Sure enough, the red-orange lines that marked him as Occupation had gone dim, his eyes closed and mouth hanging open. It wouldn’t last for long, just a few micros, but that would be enough for Beck to put some distance between him and the rooftop. Beck didn’t waste his chance, quickly docking his disk and running for the stairs that ran alongside the building. He took them two at a time, the metal vibrating beneath his boots and the splash of a puddle on the alley below as he hit the ground and kept running.
The alley, at least, was empty. Argon’s twisting network of alleys could get a program anywhere they needed to go, if they knew where they were going. Beck knew where he was going, being a native of the city and having had time to study Tron’s maps, but he was flagging. As the seconds ticked past, what energy he’d had left from the millis events began to disappear. He slowed, gasping for breath, and leaned against the wall of a building. He needed to find a bike, hit the tunnels, and meet Tron in the Spire. If they’d made it there, then—
The sound of a shot, loud and close, echoed through the alleys. Beck startled, whirled around, but no. There was no one behind him. He hadn’t been fired on. But then what…he turned back around, looked up, and felt his core grind to a halt. From this alley, he could see clear to the Plaza. To the Garage, and the Recognizer perched above it. Even from this distance he could see the energy shot, nearly half the size of the Recognizer, as it roared into the Garage. His core froze as the shot struck home, the explosion audible even halfway across the city as the blast wave rushed into the plaza, and with a massive plume of code dust, the Garage collapsed in on itself. It buckled and swayed, the roof going first, and then the walls. Everything gave way in barely a micro, all of Able’s hard work collapsing into nothing.
If there had been anyone still inside, they were gone now. Beck stared, barely able to process what he was seeing.
“No…” He felt more than heard himself whisper, taking a few shaky steps forward. If they were all gone, then— “No!”
He ran, pulling on every ounce of energy he had left to spare. The alleys blurred around him, the only thing he could see the plume of dust and smoke in the distance. Mara’s last words to him echoed, her barbed truth even more true now. He should have stayed, should have fought! He should have been there and—
A program stepped out from around a corner, red-lines bright in the dark blue of the alleys. Beck barely managed to stop before crashing into them, and his core screeched back into working order as the helmet derezzed to reveal a smiling male-designate face.
“Hello, Tron.”
Dyson.
Beck scrambled back, trying to hurry out of reach, but it was too late. Dyson sprang forward, pressing his hand to Beck’s chest, a black stain on the once clean white render. When he pulled away, a shock grenade ticked down the final beats before blast. Two nanos. Beck looked up. One nano. Dyson smirked.
The charge went off, blurring everything into white agony. Beck crumbled to the ground.
Standing at attention in the update room, Paige did her level best not to look at Tesler. Ever since the fleet had broken Argon airspace, her commanding officer had been touchy. Even more on edge than usual. Not that she could really blame him, what with Clu at the helm for this one, but it was putting her on edge and it was putting every single sentry, guard, and blackguard likewise on edge. The hundreds of highest ranking sentries were milling about the room behind her, watching their General and speaking soft, hushed tones.
No one knew what was going on, and while they were used to following orders without question, none of them liked being in the dark. Not about something this big, not after a fleet that massive had taken roost in the city and was still flying circuits over Argon’s main districts. A hundred thousand troops added to their number in less than a quarter milli, none of them really listening to General Tesler’s authority. And where was Pavel? Paige cast another look around the room, but just like the other two times she’d looked, he wasn’t there. There was only Tesler, standing with his back to her and his hands clenched into tight fists at the base of his spine. He was watching Argon, watching the light jets that had flown in with the fleet as they canvassed the entire city. What they were looking for, she just didn’t know.
Maybe she didn’t want to know. Whatever—whoever—they were hunting for likely had something to do with the mess at the Plaza. A program capable of something like that, loose in her city? While not entirely content to leave it to Clu, she wasn’t going to mind them being the ones to go after it first. At least like this she’d know what she was dealing with.
She just hoped Beck was alright. If her memory was right, he’d worked at the Garage that was bordered by that Plaza. The building that was now just plain gone, the few soldiers that had been able to return wounded as if caught in a blast. Paige had been able to speak to none of them, every last one whisked away by Clu’s soldiers that now outnumbered them five to one. Something was off about that, and it made her core lurch. Whatever had happened, whatever had caused the garage to become nothing more than a smoking heap of code and dust, it wasn’t good. The idea that Beck, soft cored and so very sweet, could have been caught up in something like that, made her processor want to stop. She’d have to try and find him later, see if he was alright. Make sure he wasn’t a part of all this. Filing the thought away in her task list, Paige drew a breath and held her position. None of them liked waiting for orders like this, Paige least of all.
But she didn’t have to wait much longer. Past all the soldiers, the door into the room swung open as Clu, clothed in a long black robe broken only by golden lines, stepped into the room.
“Sorry to keep you waiting,” He said casually as he walked between the two rows of programs. A slight hum entered the room as he rolled two small spheres between his hand, helmet retracted into his armor as he stopped in front of Tesler. Her General had already turned around, and though he looked down at Clu it was obvious who the stronger program was. Clu cut an imposing image, shorter than General Tesler but much more feared. General Tesler’s jaw worked, and Paige swore she could hear every joint in his frame creak as he kneeled, putting himself onto his hands and knees before Clu. A murmur of alarm went up amongst the soldiers as he said,
“There is a terrorist loose in Argon. A renegade…and I bear the blame.” He went silent, but Clu shook his head.
“Don’t beat yourself up, Tesler. You’ve given your best; I know it.” Clu said as he began to circle the prone General, spheres still humming while Tesler tracked his movements. “What I’ve asked of you is no less than…perfection. And that’s no easy thing to achieve, my friend.” He smiled, letting the spheres rise from his hand. Paige grimaced faintly as the hum increased in volume, wedging its way into her audio input. It was an…odd sound. Almost hypnotizing were it not for the jarring pitch. They hovered in the air before Clu’s face, spinning as he gestured to them.
“Behold, the spheres. Their curvature, their shape. So endlessly…” He trailed off as if unsure, but Paige shook her head.
“Perfect,” She breathed. And it was the truth; there were no jagged edges, no hitches or catches. They were beautiful. Clu smiled at her. It made her core stutter, ice down her spine. She blinked—perfect? They were just spheres!--but he paid no heed as he said,
“Yes. Very good, Commander. They are perfect.” He turned back to the spheres, cupping them in his hand before he dropped it to let them float on their own. “But were they always this way? Did they emerge perfect, or was their perfection seized violently, from the torrents of disorder? From chaos itself?” He asked, snapping his fingers. The spheres dropped, and with a sound far too loud for their small size, shattered across the floor in front of Tesler. Paige flinched as several Blackguard gasped in alarm, but Clu’s face remained stoically friendly as he waved a hand at General Tesler.
“Pick those up, will you?” He asked, almost casual. Paige’s core gave another hitch, watching her commanding officer lean forward and begin to scrape voxels off the ground. No one moved to help him, to step back once more. Everyone watched, waiting for the other disk to drop.
“So I ask you,” Clu suddenly spoke, breaking the tense silence, “How do you take something so clearly broken…” He raised a hand back, palming his disk. Instantly, Paige had to stifle threat warnings; this was Clu. Fighting him would be useless even if he’d come to kill them all. He’d killed Tron himself! What chance did they have? Tesler didn’t seem to think they had much of one, and stared up with wide eyes.
“And make it perfect?” Clu finished, striking downwards. Someone cut off a shout as Tesler fell back, a painful gash down his nose and across both his thumbs. Clu’s disk hummed a toxic yellow in the floor, splitting the voxel remains of the spheres. It hadn’t been a kill move, but rather a display of power. Boots crunching across the remains, Clu crouched to pick his disk up, voice now icily cold.
“By changing the hands of leadership.”
Tesler stared up at him, eyes wide. Clu stood back up, eyes cold. Paige’s core spun up in her fear, faster and faster until she was sure every program in the hall could hear it. From the corner of her eye, she could see the soldiers backing up, closing ranks as they attempted to protect themselves without fleeing the room, trying to keep Clu’s anger off of them. Clu’s disk still spun a violent, toxic yellow, teeth gleaming in the light as he opened his mouth to speak, to condemn Tesler to the games or immediate deresolution
But then he stopped and looked up. Cautiously, Paige flicked her eyes to her side as a Blackguard strode past her, gold-tinted lines of Clu’s honor guard orange in the red light of the ship. Without a word or look to anyone else, he stopped at Clu’s side and leaned up to whisper in his leader’s ear, his voice inaudible in the open hall. Clu blinked at what he heard, looking to his messenger, but when the program gave a silent nod he inclined his head.
“I see.” His voice echoed through the room, and with another nod he dismissed the messenger. As quickly as he’d come, the program left the hall, leaving them with Clu once more staring Tesler down. Eyes still wide, Tesler didn’t look away as Clu docked his disk, the click harsh in the heavy silence. For a moment, Clu simply looked down at his General, face blank and eyes cold.
But then he smiled and reached down to take Tesler by the arm, pulling him from the ground.
“But it seems I won’t have to do that right away after all. Come, come—you too, Commander.”
Letting go of Tesler’s arm, Clu strode from the room at a fast clip, his cloak billowing out behind him. Quickly taking General Tesler’s disk from him, Paige ran through the health coding as they jogged after their leader through empty tunnels. Too many rushed patch jobs from the cycles before gave her all the practice she needed to quickly patch the injuries and she handed him his disk as they headed back into the bowels of the ship. They kept dangerous prisoners here, programs that needed some persuasion to finally talk.
She hated it down here.
Clu lead them to a doorway where two of his more golden-lined sentries waited, saluting him as he came to stand in front of the door. For a moment he stopped, cocking his head as if listening, before he smiled again. Standing a pace behind her General, Paige swallowed her fear and asked,
“Sir?”
He looked from the door to her, that smile still on his face.
“It’s nothing, Commander. Just an old friend saying hello.”
And then he opened the door, gesturing for them to follow him in. Though Tesler had to duck through the doorway to fit, they both made it into the small interrogation slash containment chamber. A pillar of lit red code served as both weapon and shackle, glowing energy lines connected to two cuffs that would keep any program they brought here tied to the pillar. It was also the only light in the room after the door shut, the shadowy alcove where a disk would be locked away to taunt the captive program dim without the disk inside it. It was a good method of containment, Paige had to admit, but it had always seemed cruel to her.
She shoved the thought away as she stepped around Tesler for a better look. Pavel was already in the room, standing with a smug expression on his face as Dyson stood in front of the program that was tied to the pillar. Once her visual system had adjusted to the light, Paige had to stop herself from audibly gasping.
It was the Renegade. They’d captured the Renegade.
And apparently had struggled to do so, a small part of her processor chimed in. He was covered in blue gashes, wounds to his frame and dim circuits speaking of a long battle. His helmet was cracked and scraped, head hung low over his chest as he sat slumped on his knees with his hands shackled behind him. Pavel didn’t look much better now that she could get a good look at him, but Dyson was unharmed. Handing a disk to Clu, the foreign General looked to Tesler.
“You should know, Tesler, that Commander Pavel was instrumental in capturing the Renegade,” Dyson said with a smile. “You really ought to promote him.”
Tesler looked like he wanted to hit something, but he nodded anyway. Pavel just smiled even wider, looking crueler by the moment. Tesler looked to Clu.
“Sir,” he said quietly, “Is there a reason we’re here?”
“Consider it a…goodwill present. He was captured by one of your own, in your city,” Clu said with a casual shrug, the Renegade’s dual colored disk flipping in his hands. “You may as well see which one of your citizens has been causing you all this trouble.”
“…Yes, sir,” Tesler replied with a narrow eyed look at the Renegade, who hadn’t once raised his head or even twitched. “Thank you, sir.”
Clu smiled. Without further delay, he activated the Renegade’s disk and scrolled through the protocols. Paige’s core twisted at the violation of privacy and space, but she said nothing as Clu finally reached the helmet removal protocol. With a single press and a handful of soft clicks, the white-suited program’s helmet came off. Pavel stared, stunned silent. Clu and Dyson exchanged a confused look. Tesler frowned.
Paige had to struggle to restart her core.
Sitting there under the spotlight, head hung low and frame covered in gashes that spoke of injuries beyond the blue stain of impact across his forehead, was Beck.
11 notes · View notes
sergestilesart · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Pavel, Cutler, Mara and Zed
the evil goober, the iconic voice, and the adorable ship that didn't have time to sail
33 notes · View notes
wynandcore · 10 months
Text
Uprising CLU is “Biggering” and Legacy CLU is “How Bad Can I Be”.
Do you understand my vision
61 notes · View notes
enforcerrinzler · 11 months
Note
Canon you outright reject
A canon or headcanon hill you will die on
Worst personality trait
Age/height/weight headcanon
Unpopular opinion about them
Worst thing they’ve ever done
Deepest darkest secret they won’t even admit to themselves
Oh boy big list!
Canon I Outright Reject
The fact that we never got a Tron Uprising Season 2 ehem I mean the fact that we got so little Tron/Rinzler in a movie named Tron: Legacy EHEM I MEAN there’s not too much in canon specifically about Rinzler that I reject, maybe the lack of sympathy he was given and how some of the framing around his character blamed him for becoming what he is. Because that’s just victim blaming and it sucks.
A Canon or Headcanon Hill You Will Die On
Dog Coded Rinzler, as much as I love the whole ‘cat Rinzler’ cause of his purr and I do enjoy seeing and making fanart for it. Rinzler will always be dog coded.
Worst personality trait
Rinzler is stubborn, to the point that he has run himself into the ground multiple times because he will never admit when he needs time to recharge. And they will keep fighting with a horrible injury until the mission is done, and then even after from pure spite.
Age/Height/Weight Headcanon
Age: early 30s for post uprising and legacy, early 20s for 1982 (though these are rough estimates because User vs Grid time is weird)
Height: 5’11, in my hc just a lil bit shorter than Clu
Weight: 170lbs? (Im going to be honest im going off of my memories of calculations from highschool pe so this may be wildly inaccurate for height and stuff)
Unpopular Opinion About Them
I’m not sure if I really have any unpopular opinions? At least no one has told me ‘hey this sucks’. I guess maybe the shorter than Clu hc???? Cause I’ve seen a decent amount of people hc him as Bruce Boxleitner’s height.
Worst Thing They’ve Ever Done
Other than killing Yori? Probably killing Mara and Zed in front of Beck on Clu’s orders.
Deepest Darkest Secret They Won’t Even Admit To Themselves
The closest ‘darkest’ secret I think is the fact that he’s convinced he’s going to ‘glitch’ or ‘malfunction’ so bad one day that he’s going to become a danger to the Grid. Because during these ‘glitches’ he’s tried to hurt Clu. And hurting Clu hurts the Grid.
7 notes · View notes
Text
Why Can't They Get TRON Right?
Tumblr media
Perhaps we fans of the 1982 Steve Lisberger-directed sci-fi adventure TRON were lucky to even get a belated sequel in the first place...
TRON: LEGACY was greenlit by Disney after many years of the original film garnering a massive cult following after its so-so box office run during a summer where E.T. ruled the roost. Contrary to popular belief, TRON was not really a "flop". It just wasn't the blockbuster Disney had wanted it to be, its okay $50m gross against a $17m budget did not put it in the echelon of STAR WARS and RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK. Its many video game spin-offs, such as the arcade game from Bally Midway, fared way better... As did the home video sales over the years. The film got a fantastic 2-disc DVD in 2002, followed by a new game called TRON 2.0. A second life well-lived, so far...
Disney got Joseph Kosinski, who had directed multiple video game commercials including those for HALO 3 and GEARS OF WAR, to helm the picture, and brought back Jeff Bridges and Bruce Boxleitner from the original. After a whole 2 1/2 years of hyping this picture up, beginning all the way back in 2008 at San Diego Comic Con (that "TR2N" teaser that was later slightly redone as the film's theatrical teaser in late 2009), TRON: LEGACY bowed in Christmas 2010 to mixed reviews but fairly impressive box office.
I mean, impressive for a movie that was a belated sequel to a cult classic sci-fi movie that wasn't for everybody! I mean, really, $400m worldwide for that kind of thing is nothing to scoff. But for Disney, it wasn't enough. An animated series called TRON: UPRISING debuted on Disney's various channels - namely Disney XD - to solid ratings, but then Disney moved the show to a timeslot where few could stay up and watch it. They straight up murdered it, ratings sunk, no second season...
But, it still seemed like a third movie could happen, after an executive shake-up or two. Kosinski would be back, along with Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner, and LEGACY newcomers Garrett Hedlund, Olivia Wilde, and Cillian Murphy. By spring 2015, TRON: ASCENSION was locked and ready to go for a fall shoot... But Disney got cold feet, after the release of a similarly big-budget sci-fi film of theirs - Brad Bird's TOMORROWLAND - bombed at the box office. Typical capitalist nonsense, a slightly similar movie fails? Boom, your project's dead. TRON: ASCENSION did not move forward...
Shortly thereafter, Disney began developing a spin-off film called TRON: ARES. A TRON movie in name only, if you ask me, starring Jared Leto. Said to be a creep that somehow dodged Me Too, and also... Uh, his erratic behavior? All that "method acting"? And his resume hasn't been too hot, either... And yet, the years have gone by, Disney keeps trying to make Fetch, I mean- TRON: ARES happen. Even after proposing and then shelving a Disney+ series based on the property.
By 2020, it seemed to be going full speed ahead with a director attached, Garth Davis. He exited the project a little while ago, now it has KON-TIKI, PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN 5, and MALEFICENT 2 director Joachim Ronning as director. It was supposed to shoot this month... But because The Walt Disney Company and all the other big studios just can't pay actors and writers what they need to keep roofs over their heads... Production has stalled...
And the other day, you had Ronning saying, "This is Hollywood. We close deals for breakfast. Why do we suddenly have all the time in the world when every day is so precious? These tactics are extremely frustrating. It’s time for diplomacy so we can get back to work – under conditions that are fair to everybody"...
Really? Like... Really??
It's like this TRON spin-off is cursed, infected with a virus if you will:
Stalled and stalled for years, went through more than one director, evolved out of a cancelled true sequel to the previous TRON film (which will turn 13 in December), has freakin' Jared Leto super-glued to this thing (as lead actor and producer, like what's his stake in TRON?), and now its director is being a dingus about the strikes...
And here I am, saying... Disney, you could've just greenlit TRON 3 from director Joseph Kosinski, filmed it in 2015, released it in 2017/18-ish... And called it a day.
Hell, you could've landed Kosinski after he went and directed 2022's megablockbuster juggernaut TOP GUN: MAVERICK! But ya didn't!
Disney just doesn't know what to do with TRON, it seems. They seem to keep going back to it for aesthetic reasons, but can't somehow make the story itself work in order to get Marvel movie grosses out of it. (Not that it should be doing that in the first place, it's freakin' TRON.) As a friend of mine put it, Disney looks at it and says, "The one with the highlighter bikes, yeah let's do that!" The story itself really isn't out of reach in a post-MATRIX world anyways.
Ex out TRON: LEGACY's budget and how Disney bean counters expected it to do, and you have a movie that quite a few people went to go see in a theater! $170m+ domestically, $400m worldwide. Again, that was fantastic for a TRON sequel! Reportedly, Disney hoped that this December 2010 release would be the next AVATAR, which was a December 2009 release. They hoped that the digital world spectacle and 3D would be their ticket to having a piece of that pie, but they guessed wrong... They missed the forest for the trees. Plus, the 3D craze evaporated at the speed of sound after AVATAR came out. And that was because a ton of movies that didn't do what James Cameron did to deliver a truly immersive experience soured audiences on 3D. Most of the time, you essentially paid to watch a movie with sunglasses on.
But all those TRON woes go back to their difficulties making sci-fi pictures that become hits, or franchises. All the way back to 1979's ill-fated THE BLACK HOLE, and plenty more, from ATLANTIS: THE LOST EMPIRE to JOHN CARTER OF MARS to TOMORROWLAND to LIGHTYEAR to STRANGE WORLD.
It's especially strange to me because science fiction and futurism and space travel are a big part of Disney... I mean, Tomorrowland itself in the Disney theme parks, it was there since the day Disneyland itself opened in 1955. Walt Disney's DISNEYLAND anthology TV series had whole programs dedicated to space and the cosmos: MAN IN SPACE, MARS AND BEYOND, etc. And of course, the big one... EPCOT! Both EPCOT the city concept and EPCOT Center/Epcot, the theme park in Walt Disney World.
I should shut up, probably, and just be happy that Disney is doing *anything* with TRON in the film world. We have the two rollercoasters, yes, the one in WDW Florida and the one in Shanghai. I'd love to ride it, but Florida ain't the place for a person like me at the moment, so that's gonna have to wait.
Anyways, I've been very iffy about this TRON-without-Tron movie since we started hearing about it right around this time in 2016... I just find it kind of fascinating that it has stalled for so long, and right as it was about to get shootin'... The strikes happened (and of course had to/needed to). The reports say that it's still on once the studio heads stop being dinguses, but we shall see...
But for me personally? I just want the actual TRON 3... Maybe, if this movie happens first and does okay for itself... Then we get TRON 3? A sort-of two mainline movies, a spin-off, and a threequel situation? I'll take whatever I can get.
End of line.
8 notes · View notes
majotano · 2 years
Text
Tron franchise needs Uprising season 2, not Tron Ares with fucking Jared Leto
Tumblr media
13 notes · View notes