Jared Leto’s star power took a hit this month as Tron: Ares, Disney’s latest attempt to revive its cult sci-fi franchise, underperformed at the global box office—raising serious questions about his future as a franchise-leading man.
At the film’s flashy London premiere on October 1, Leto made a dramatic entrance, standing 30 feet above Piccadilly Circus in a red raincoat and white suit, greeting fans like a cosmic messiah. It was classic Leto: bold, theatrical, headline-grabbing. But the spectacle failed to translate into box office returns.
Tron: Ares opened to just $33.2 million domestically and $60.2 million globally—a far cry from what Disney had hoped for given its $180 million production budget. Young male audiences, the film’s target demographic, largely ignored it, and the movie earned a lukewarm B+ CinemaScore. Insiders now suggest that the Tron franchise may have finally run out of steam.
Leto, who both starred in and produced Ares, reportedly pushed for years to get the project greenlit. Originally pitched as a sequel to 2010’s Tron: Legacy, the script evolved to center around Ares, a new character designed specifically for Leto. He championed the film within Disney and gained the backing of then-studio head Sean Bailey—who has since exited the company.
Despite his passion and commitment, Leto’s ability to carry major studio films has been in doubt since Morbius, the Sony Marvel spin-off, underwhelmed in 2022. While he earned praise early in his career for intense performances in Requiem for a Dream and Dallas Buyers Club (which earned him an Oscar), his more recent ventures into genre franchises have failed to connect with audiences.
The release of Tron: Ares also came amid troubling headlines. A June 2025 report from Air Mail detailed nine allegations against Leto, ranging from inappropriate behavior to more serious accusations. Though his team denied all claims and no new legal actions followed, the cloud around his reputation made Disney executives uneasy.
Still, insiders say Leto remained professional during the film’s global promotional tour and collected a high seven-figure salary, plus producing fees. But with Ares falling flat, sources say studios are already moving away from casting Leto as a lead in tentpole films. As one veteran agency partner noted, “In a world where even actors like Michael Fassbender and Ewan McGregor struggle to get leading roles, Jared Leto just doesn’t make business sense anymore.”
His next role as Skeletor in Masters of the Universe—a campy villain rather than the film’s central hero—may signal a shift toward supporting or stylized characters instead of front-and-center roles.
Ultimately, while Tron: Ares might have fulfilled a personal ambition for Leto, it also seems to have punctuated a turning point in his career. The franchise dream may be over—and the industry is already looking to newer, less controversial faces to lead the next wave of blockbusters.

















