The Matrix Reloaded (2003)
7 /10
8467 Reviews
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Six months after the events depicted in The Matrix, Neo has proved to be a good omen for the free humans, as more and more humans are being freed from the matrix and brought to Zion, the one and only stronghold of the Resistance. Neo himself has discovered his superpowers including super speed, ability to see the codes of the things inside the matrix and a certain degree of pre-cognition. But a nasty piece of news hits the human resistance: 250,000 machine sentinels are digging to Zion and would reach them in 72 hours. As Zion prepares for the ultimate war, Neo, Morpheus and Trinity are advised by the Oracle to find the Keymaker who would help them reach the Source. Meanwhile Neo's recurrent dreams depicting Trinity's death have got him worried and as if it was not enough, Agent Smith has somehow escaped deletion, has become more powerful than before and has fixed Neo as his next target.
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cast
... Thomas A. Anderson / Neo
... Morpheus
... Trinity
... Agent Smith
... Niobe
User reviews
Commander Lock: "Not everyone believes what you believe." Morpheus: "My beliefs do not require that they do." Characters are always talking like this in "The Matrix Reloaded," which plays like a collaboration involving a geek, a comic book and the smartest kid in Philosophy 101. Morpheus in particular unreels extended speeches that remind me of Laurence Olivier's remarks when he won his honorary Oscar--the speech that had Jon Voight going "God!" on TV, but in print turned out to be quasi-Shakespearean doublespeak. The speeches provide not meaning, but the effect of meaning: It sure sounds like those guys are saying some profound things.
That will not prevent fanboys from analyzing the philosophy of "The Matrix Reloaded" in endless Web postings. Part of the fun is becoming an expert in the deep meaning of shallow pop mythology; there is something refreshingly ironic about becoming an authority on the transient extrusions of mass culture, and Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) now joins Obi-Wan Kenobi as the Plato of our age.
I say this not in disapproval, but in amusement. "The Matrix" (1999), written and directed by the brothers Andy and Larry Wachowski, inspired so much inflamed pseudo-philosophy that it's all "The Matrix Reloaded" can do to stay ahead of its followers. It is an immensely skillful sci-fi adventure, combining the usual elements: heroes and villains, special effects and stunts, chases and explosions, romance and oratory. It develops its world with more detail than the first movie was able to afford, gives us our first glimpse of the underground human city of Zion, burrows closer to the heart of the secret of the Matrix, and promotes its hero, Neo, from confused draftee to a Christ figure in training.
As we learned in "The Matrix," the Machines need human bodies, millions and millions of them, for their ability to generate electricity. In an astonishing sequence, we saw countless bodies locked in pods around central cores that extended out of sight above and below. The Matrix is the virtual reality that provides the minds of these sleepers with the illusion that they are active and productive. Questions arise, such as, is there no more efficient way to generate power? And why give the humans dreams when they would generate just as much energy if comatose? And why create such a complex virtual world for each and every one of them, when they could all be given the same illusion and be none the wiser? Why is each dreamer himself or herself, occupying the same body in virtual reality as the one asleep in the pod? But never mind. We are grateful that 250,000 humans have escaped from the grid of the Matrix, and gathered to build Zion, which is "near the Earth's core--where there is more heat." As the movie opens, we are alarmed to learn that the Machines are drilling toward Zion so quickly that they will arrive in 36 hours. We may also wonder if Zion and its free citizens really exist, or if the humans only think so, but that leads to a logical loop ending in madness.
Neo (Keanu Reeves) has been required to fly, to master martial arts, and to learn that his faith and belief can make things happen. His fights all take place within virtual reality spaces, while he reclines in a chair and is linked to the cyberworld, but he can really be killed, because if the mind thinks it is dead, "the body is controlled by the mind." All of the fight sequences, therefore, are logically contests not between physical bodies, but between video game-players, and the Neo in the big fight scenes is actually his avatar.
The visionary Morpheus, inspired by the prophecies of the Oracle, instructed Neo--who gained the confidence to leap great distances, to fly and in "Reloaded" destroys dozens of clones of Agent Smith (Hugo Weaving) in martial combat. That fight scene is made with the wonders of digital effects and the choreography of the Hong Kong action director Yuen Wo Ping, who also did the fights in "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon." It provides one of the three great set pieces in the movie.
The second comes when Morpheus returns to Zion and addresses the assembled multitude--an audience that looks like a mosh pit crossed with the underground slaves in "Metropolis." After his speech, the citizens dance in a percussion-driven frenzy, which is intercut with Neo and Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss) having sex. I think their real bodies are having the sex, although you can never be sure.
The third sensational sequence is a chase involving cars, motorcycles and trailer trucks, with gloriously choreographed moves including leaps into the air as a truck continues to move underneath. That this scene logically takes place in cyberspace does not diminish its thrilling 14-minute fun ride, although we might wonder--when deadly enemies meet in one of these virtual spaces, who programmed it? (I am sure I will get untold thousands of e-mails explaining it all to me.) I became aware, during the film, that a majority of the major characters were played by African Americans. Neo and Trinity are white, and so is Agent Smith, but consider Morpheus; his superior Commander Lock (Harry Lennix); the beautiful and deadly Niobe (Jada Pinkett Smith), who once loved Morpheus and now is with Lock, although she explains enigmatically that some things never change; the programmer Link (Harold Perrineau); Link's wife, Zee (Nona Gaye), who has the obligatory scene where she complains he's away from home too much, and the Oracle (the late Gloria Foster, very portentous). From what we can see of the extras, the population of Zion is largely black.
It has become commonplace for science fiction epics to feature one or two African-American stars, but we've come a long way since Billy Dee Williams in "Return of the Jedi." The Wachowski brothers use so many African Americans, I suspect, not for their box-office appeal, because the Matrix is the star of the movie, and not because they are good actors (which they are), but because to the white teenagers who are the primary audience for this movie, African-Americans embody a cool, a cachet, an authenticy. Morpheus is the power center of the movie, and Neo's role is essentially to study under him and absorb his mojo.
The film ends with "To Be Concluded," a reminder that the third film in the trilogy arrives in November. Toward the end, there are scenes involving characters who seem pregnant with possibilities for Part 3. One is the Architect (Helmut Bakaltis), who says he designed the Matrix and revises everything Neo thinks he knows about it. Is the Architect a human, or an avatar of the Machines? The thing is, you can never know for sure. He seems to hint that when you strip away one level of false virtual reality, you find another level beneath. Maybe everything so far is several levels up? Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time tells the story of a cosmologist whose speech is interrupted by a little old lady who informs him that the universe rests on the back of a turtle. "Ah, yes, madame," the scientist replies, "but what does the turtle rest on?" The old lady shoots back: "You can't trick me, young man. It's nothing but turtles, turtles, turtles, all the way down."
3.5/4
- Roger Ebert
Genres:
Release Date:
2003-05-15
Run Time:
138 min
MMPA Rating:
R
Reviews of
The Matrix Reloaded
Commander Lock: "Not everyone believes what you believe." Morpheus: "My beliefs do not require that they do." Characters are always talking like this in "The Matrix Reloaded," which plays like a collaboration involving a geek, a comic book and the smartest kid in Philosophy 101. Morpheus in particular unreels extended speeches that remind me of Laurence Olivier's remarks when he won his honorary Oscar--the speech that had Jon Voight going "God!" on TV, but in print turned out to be quasi-Shakespearean doublespeak. The speeches provide not meaning, but the effect of meaning: It sure sounds like those guys are saying some profound things.
That will not prevent fanboys from analyzing the philosophy of "The Matrix Reloaded" in endless Web postings. Part of the fun is becoming an expert in the deep meaning of shallow pop mythology; there is something refreshingly ironic about becoming an authority on the transient extrusions of mass culture, and Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) now joins Obi-Wan Kenobi as the Plato of our age.
I say this not in disapproval, but in amusement. "The Matrix" (1999), written and directed by the brothers Andy and Larry Wachowski, inspired so much inflamed pseudo-philosophy that it's all "The Matrix Reloaded" can do to stay ahead of its followers. It is an immensely skillful sci-fi adventure, combining the usual elements: heroes and villains, special effects and stunts, chases and explosions, romance and oratory. It develops its world with more detail than the first movie was able to afford, gives us our first glimpse of the underground human city of Zion, burrows closer to the heart of the secret of the Matrix, and promotes its hero, Neo, from confused draftee to a Christ figure in training.
As we learned in "The Matrix," the Machines need human bodies, millions and millions of them, for their ability to generate electricity. In an astonishing sequence, we saw countless bodies locked in pods around central cores that extended out of sight above and below. The Matrix is the virtual reality that provides the minds of these sleepers with the illusion that they are active and productive. Questions arise, such as, is there no more efficient way to generate power? And why give the humans dreams when they would generate just as much energy if comatose? And why create such a complex virtual world for each and every one of them, when they could all be given the same illusion and be none the wiser? Why is each dreamer himself or herself, occupying the same body in virtual reality as the one asleep in the pod? But never mind. We are grateful that 250,000 humans have escaped from the grid of the Matrix, and gathered to build Zion, which is "near the Earth's core--where there is more heat." As the movie opens, we are alarmed to learn that the Machines are drilling toward Zion so quickly that they will arrive in 36 hours. We may also wonder if Zion and its free citizens really exist, or if the humans only think so, but that leads to a logical loop ending in madness.
Neo (Keanu Reeves) has been required to fly, to master martial arts, and to learn that his faith and belief can make things happen. His fights all take place within virtual reality spaces, while he reclines in a chair and is linked to the cyberworld, but he can really be killed, because if the mind thinks it is dead, "the body is controlled by the mind." All of the fight sequences, therefore, are logically contests not between physical bodies, but between video game-players, and the Neo in the big fight scenes is actually his avatar.
The visionary Morpheus, inspired by the prophecies of the Oracle, instructed Neo--who gained the confidence to leap great distances, to fly and in "Reloaded" destroys dozens of clones of Agent Smith (Hugo Weaving) in martial combat. That fight scene is made with the wonders of digital effects and the choreography of the Hong Kong action director Yuen Wo Ping, who also did the fights in "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon." It provides one of the three great set pieces in the movie.
The second comes when Morpheus returns to Zion and addresses the assembled multitude--an audience that looks like a mosh pit crossed with the underground slaves in "Metropolis." After his speech, the citizens dance in a percussion-driven frenzy, which is intercut with Neo and Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss) having sex. I think their real bodies are having the sex, although you can never be sure.
The third sensational sequence is a chase involving cars, motorcycles and trailer trucks, with gloriously choreographed moves including leaps into the air as a truck continues to move underneath. That this scene logically takes place in cyberspace does not diminish its thrilling 14-minute fun ride, although we might wonder--when deadly enemies meet in one of these virtual spaces, who programmed it? (I am sure I will get untold thousands of e-mails explaining it all to me.) I became aware, during the film, that a majority of the major characters were played by African Americans. Neo and Trinity are white, and so is Agent Smith, but consider Morpheus; his superior Commander Lock (Harry Lennix); the beautiful and deadly Niobe (Jada Pinkett Smith), who once loved Morpheus and now is with Lock, although she explains enigmatically that some things never change; the programmer Link (Harold Perrineau); Link's wife, Zee (Nona Gaye), who has the obligatory scene where she complains he's away from home too much, and the Oracle (the late Gloria Foster, very portentous). From what we can see of the extras, the population of Zion is largely black.
It has become commonplace for science fiction epics to feature one or two African-American stars, but we've come a long way since Billy Dee Williams in "Return of the Jedi." The Wachowski brothers use so many African Americans, I suspect, not for their box-office appeal, because the Matrix is the star of the movie, and not because they are good actors (which they are), but because to the white teenagers who are the primary audience for this movie, African-Americans embody a cool, a cachet, an authenticy. Morpheus is the power center of the movie, and Neo's role is essentially to study under him and absorb his mojo.
The film ends with "To Be Concluded," a reminder that the third film in the trilogy arrives in November. Toward the end, there are scenes involving characters who seem pregnant with possibilities for Part 3. One is the Architect (Helmut Bakaltis), who says he designed the Matrix and revises everything Neo thinks he knows about it. Is the Architect a human, or an avatar of the Machines? The thing is, you can never know for sure. He seems to hint that when you strip away one level of false virtual reality, you find another level beneath. Maybe everything so far is several levels up? Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time tells the story of a cosmologist whose speech is interrupted by a little old lady who informs him that the universe rests on the back of a turtle. "Ah, yes, madame," the scientist replies, "but what does the turtle rest on?" The old lady shoots back: "You can't trick me, young man. It's nothing but turtles, turtles, turtles, all the way down."
3.5/4
- Roger Ebert
Cast & Crew of
The Matrix Reloaded
Cast
... Thomas A. Anderson / Neo
... Morpheus
... Trinity
... Agent Smith
... Niobe
... Oracle
... Link
... Persephone
... Commander Lock
... The Merovingian
... The Keymaker
... Zee
... Councillor Hamann
... Agent Johnson
... The Architect
... Agent Jackson
... Agent Thompson
... Seraph
... Twin #1
... Twin #2
... Vector
... Priestess
... Soren
... Bane
... Old Woman at Zion
... Zion Controller
... Bike Carrier Driver
... Ice
... Zion Virtual Control Operator
... Woman with Groceries
... Corrupt
... Another Old Woman at Zion
... Young Thomas Anderson at 12
... Maggie
... Wurm
... Security Guard #5
... Maitre D'
... A.P.U. Escort
... Captain Ballard
... Young Thomas Anderson at 4
... Abel
... Mauser
... Colt
... Mifune
... Computer Room Technician
... AK
... Link's Nephew
... Power Station Guard
... Computer Room Guard
... Beautiful Woman at Le Vrai
... Zion Gate Operator
... Councillor Dillard
... Cain
... Officer Wirtz
... Operator
... Young Thomas Anderson at 8
... Lock's Lieutenant
... Councillor West
... Roland
... Ajax
... Gidim Truck Driver
... 18 Wheel Trucker
... Binary
... Tirant
... Young Thomas Anderson at 2
... Cas
... Police #1
... Police #2
... Malachi
... Security Bunker Guard
... Kid
... Axel
... Rama-Kandra
... Security Bunker Guard #2
... Ghost
... Power Station Guard
... Pilot (uncredited)
... Merovingian's Thug (uncredited)
... Merovingian's Thug (uncredited)
... Kali
Crew
... Producer
... Casting
... Executive Producer
... Set Decoration
... Stunts
... Editor
... Second Unit Director
... Original Music Composer
... Costume Design
... Director of Photography
... Production Supervisor
... Executive Producer
... Executive Producer
... Unit Production Manager
... Screenplay
... Director
... Executive Producer
... Screenplay
... Director
... Executive Producer
... Casting
... Production Design
... Art Direction
... Supervising Art Director
... Sound Designer
... Supervising Sound Editor
... Music Editor
... Art Direction
... Set Decoration
... Makeup Artist
... Sound Designer
... Sound Effects Editor
... Special Effects
... Visual Effects
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Art Direction
... Art Direction
... Key Makeup Artist
... Special Effects Supervisor
... Stunts
... Makeup Department Head
... Assistant Director
... First Assistant Director
... Post Production Supervisor
... Unit Publicist
... Stunts
... Boom Operator
... Makeup Artist
... Stunts
... Casting Assistant
... Special Effects Supervisor
... Concept Artist
... Stunts
... Art Direction
... Fight Choreographer
... Associate Producer
... Assistant Art Director
... Casting Associate
... Second Unit Director of Photography
... Second Unit Director
... Stunts
... Makeup Artist
... Dialect Coach
... Stunts
... ADR Recordist
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Supervising Sound Editor
... Stunts
... Stunt Double
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Stunts
... ADR Voice Casting
... Visual Effects Coordinator
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Assistant Art Director
... Production Coordinator
... Stunts
... Foley Artist
... Assistant Art Director
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Key Costumer
... Stunts
... Costume Supervisor
... Key Costumer
... Sound Effects Editor
... Sound Effects Designer
... Stunts
... Modeling
... Sound Re-Recording Mixer
... Sound Re-Recording Mixer
... Sound Re-Recording Mixer
... Transportation Coordinator
... Stunts
... Set Designer
... Sound Effects Editor
... Stunts
... Pilot
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Visual Effects Producer
... Music Editor
... Gaffer
... Foley Artist
... Assistant Sound Editor
... Sound Effects Editor
... Digital Effects Producer
... Visual Effects Supervisor
... Sculptor
... Visual Effects Editor
... Supervising Dialogue Editor
... Stunts
... Hair Department Head
... Unit Publicist
... Second Unit Director of Photography
... Sound Effects Editor
... Construction Coordinator
... Sound Effects Editor
... Concept Artist
... Foley Mixer
... Stunts
... Storyboard Artist
... Grip
... Ager/Dyer
... Script Supervisor
... Stunts
... Makeup Artist
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Makeup Artist
... Stunts
... Key Makeup Artist
... Armorer
... Armorer
... Chief Lighting Technician
... Unit Production Manager
... First Assistant Sound Editor
... Visual Effects Supervisor
... Concept Artist
... Extras Casting
... Location Manager
... Production Supervisor
... Makeup Artist
... Key Grip
... Property Master
... Production Accountant
... Assistant Sound Editor
... Assistant Location Manager
... Set Designer
... Sound Recordist
... Boom Operator
... Pilot
... Associate Producer
... Second Assistant Director
... Foley Mixer
... Stunts
... Transportation Captain
... Foley Recordist
... Ager/Dyer
... Dialect Coach
... Assistant Sound Editor
... Dolly Grip
... Grip
... Best Boy Grip
... Stunts
... ADR Mixer
... Dolly Grip
... Stunts
... Stunts
... ADR Editor
... Stunts
... Travel Coordinator
... Stunts
... Second Unit First Assistant Director
... Assistant Art Director
... Construction Coordinator
... Assistant Accountant
... Second Second Assistant Director
... Assistant Accountant
... Assistant Accountant
... Second Assistant Accountant
... First Assistant Accountant
... Second Second Assistant Director
... Second Second Assistant Director
... Production Supervisor
... Stunts
... Conceptual Design
... Second Assistant Director
... Key Grip
... Second Unit First Assistant Director
... Location Manager
... Construction Foreman
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Stunts
... Grip
... Payroll Accountant
... Stunts
... Pilot
... Extras Casting Assistant