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October 12, 2025

Decades later, TRON’s Oscar snub feels oddly prophetic



With TRON: Ares finally in cinemas, the digital frontier is glowing again (though a little dimmer than before). The news sent me back to the 1982 original, and honestly, rewatching it feels like discovering the moment cinema first embraced something new. Among the best CG films of the 1980s, a shortlist that barely existed at the time, TRON stands apart not just for its CG innovations, but for the sheer audacity of its vision.

The film’s neon grids, spinning light cycles, and crystalline landscapes might look primitive now, indeed, much of the movie relies on tried and trusted matte painting, but there’s a strange purity to them, a sense that this was the first time someone looked at a computer and thought, this is a place we could live in. Let’s remember, this was peak Atari, arcades were destinations, and the world was just embracing video games.

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(Image credit: Disney)

Ready Player One. (After seeing the movie, Disney animator John Lasseter founded Pixar two years later.)

So yes, TRON was recognised for its costumes, but what the Academy really acknowledged was a revolution in visual storytelling. Those suits gave a face to the virtual. They made cyberspace emotional. You can trace TRON’s DNA through motion graphics, UI design, and the entire cyberpunk aesthetic.

(Image credit: Disney)

Sora 2 that can write scripts, animate characters, and generate imagery. Are they tools for artists, or replacements for them? Should creativity be celebrated when it’s machine-assisted, or condemned for being too easy? The echoes of 1982 are louder than ever.

Will we be here again in forty years, looking back at the first wave of AI-driven cinema the same way we now look at TRON, the misunderstood outlier that changed everything? I’ve spoken to many AI filmmakers, some established, and they all see AI as a creative tool. Spike Jonze’s surreal Gucci movie shows how filmmakers can really use AI, too.

(Image credit: Disney)

More than four decades later, TRON still feels like a moment the film industry stopped and changed direction, just as it had done years earlier when Oz was colourised and Mary Poppins danced with animated animals.

That’s why it deserves to be part of today’s AI conversation. If we’ve learned anything from TRON’s effects, from its blend of design, costumes, and CG, it’s that human creativity needs to remain in the mix, but if history repeats itself, we’ll once again see artists accused of cheating, right up until their work redefines what creativity means.



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