The Matrix
The Matrix (1999)

The Matrix

3/5
(16 votos)
8.7IMDb73Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

In the first scene in which Neo appears, we see him from above, sleeping in front of his computer.

The keyboard he is using is a Microsoft Natural Keyboard Pro with the atypical curved key configuration.

When messages begin appearing on his screen, he tries to stop them by hitting various keys, but the close-up of the keys show keys from a standard keyboard that are clearly not the keys on a Natural Keyboard Pro.

When Neo first meets Morpheus, they shake hands.

We see Morpheus from behind, and his left arm is behind his back.

Then we see Morpheus from the front, and his left arm is straight down at his side.

Then we see Morpheus from the back again, and his arm is once again behind his back.

After Trinity crashes through the window, tumbles down the stairs and then points her guns back toward the window, we cut to a close shot of the top of the stairs showing a hanging light fixture swinging back and forth.

A few seconds before, during an over-the-shoulder shot from Trinity's perspective, the fixture is perfectly still.

The sound and image imply that it did not start swinging until she reached the bottom of the stairs.

When Neo has hundreds of acupuncture needles in his body, needles disappear from his head.

The comments on DVD indicate that all of the needles were a prosthetic device except for the ones in his head.

The real needles are there when the camera looks at him from the side, but then disappear as the camera moves in.

After Morpheus is rescued from the Agents, the blood and marks on his face are gone.

He's been under a huge stream of water that probably washed them away.

Near the end of the subway fight scene, Agent Smith throws Neo into a wall after which he falls onto the rails along with debris from the wall, but when Neo backflips onto the platform, the debris is neatly positioned by the wall.

When Neo passes through the metal detector before the lobby shootout, the side profile shot as he is stopped by the guard has him with his jacket halfway open.

He is clearly unarmed as he is wearing a normal belt and there are no guns under his jacket.

However, he then opens his jacket from a completely closed state to reveal that he is wearing a fully loaded gun belt with both weapons and ammo.

During the Subway fight scene between Neo and Smith, Neo's hair turns from dusty to non-dusty, and back again several times.

During the fight scene between Neo and Agent Smith in the subway station, after Neo incapacitates the agent and flips out of the way of the oncoming train, you can see where the wire harness connects to his back.

You can also see one of the wires visible by his wrist.

After Neo shots his whole ammo at his first Agent on the rooftop, he throws his guns away, but in the next famous bullet-time scene there are no guns in sight.

When Neo meets Trinity for the first time in the nightclub she is close to him talking in his ear.

Even though she pauses between sentences the shot from the back of Trinity shows that her jaw is still moving during the pauses.

During the bit when Trinity's helicopter is crashing, right after Neo says "Trinity!" there is a shot of the helicopter in slow motion falling and disappearing under the ledge of the building Neo is standing on in the foreground, with the building that it's going to crash into behind.

However, the helicopter is not reflected in the building's windows.

When Morpheus is running towards the helicopter after Neo decimated the room with a minigun, Agent Smith walks in and fires his weapon through the wall, hoping to hit him.

He shoots at a downward angle, but when we see the bullets pass by in slow motion, they are parallel with the floor.

When Agent Smith is interrogating Morpheus, he has his hands on his head, his index finger is in front of his ear in the shot from behind, but in the shot from the other direction, his index finger is behind his ear.

When Neo is fighting the agent in the subway scene, they shoot at each other in bullet time.

Though there are bullets coming out of the pistols, the actions of the pistols (the top part of the gun that slides back to allow the spent cartridge to spring out of the barrel) are not moving to let the pistol reload.

In spite of this, the slides are locked back once the guns are empty.

In addition, there is no recoil.

When Morpheus and Neo are in the Agent Training program, the first shot of Neo you don't see a dove in the reflective glass behind him, in the second shot you see one.

When Neo drops the phone, the first time you see the phone falling, there is a parade marching in the street below.

Cut immediately back to Neo, the street is empty.

Numerous differences between sunglass reflections and the surroundings.

When Neo is rescuing Trinity from the falling helicopter, he slides across the roof of a building.

When he reaches the edge, his foot hits the block causing it to move, but in a way consistent with a real block whose grout is imperfect; after all, that's a rather large force.

After Neo is shot by Agent Smith, Trinity leans close to whisper.

Her hair begins to fall over her face.

Cut to another angle and her hair is back in place again.

Just before the door to the Oracle's apartment opens, Morpheus has his glasses on.

After the door opens and the camera angle switches, his glasses are in his left hand (visible after Neo crosses in front).

Presumably he snatched them off in the same move that instantly took his arms from a 90-degree angle to straight down.

As agent Smith is fighting Morpheus, he hits him several times with his head.

Smith's sunglasses are on-off-on between shots.

The piece of meat Cypher eats at the restaurant changes from one shot to the next.

The 'Massive Attack' (qv) song "Dissolved Girl" playing in Neo's headphones is track 6 on the album, not track 5, and the timing on the counter is off in relation to the actual song.

Given Neo's equipment, it could well have been a homemade custom CD.

When his boss, Mr.

Reinhart, is lecturing Thomas Anderson, Anderson's hands are in front when seen from outside and from the rear, and behind him when seen from Mr.

Reinhart's desk.

When Morpheus and Neo move from the dojo to the jump program, the shot from their viewpoint looking down shows them landing far from any roof structures, on a building much higher than any nearby.

The next shot of Neo shows them to be right next to a structure, on a building about as tall as one right across the street.

While Neo is on the way to the Oracle, his sideburns change length and shape.

When Morpheus is showing Neo the construct, there are no shadows (even under their feet).

However, when Neo wants out, he steps back and there are shadows under his feet.

As the team prepares to visit the Oracle, we see Tank "loading them up" pressing buttons on the various keyboards around him.

Before the last cut, his right hand is up, pressing buttons while his left hand is down.

When we cut to the shot above Tank, his left arm is up and his right arm is down.

The gun Neo is handed as the police attack is a Zastava CZ-99, similar to the SIG-Sauer P228 but in later shots he is using a Glock, and then a CZ-99 again.

The chain of ammunition for the gun in the helicopter does not feed directly into the gun; it goes through a feeding mechanism between the ammo box and the gun.

Further, the shells that drop are indeed spent; they have a bottleneck shape that confuses some viewers.

During the fight scene in the subway, as the Agent is about to punch through the concrete post, the section to be punched out is clearly visible.

In the "dodge this" scene, Trinity's gun changes from a Beretta 92F to a Beretta 84F.

When Neo backflips out of the train's way, the distance between him and the train changes.

After Neo steals a man's cellular phone and the agents shoot at him, we see him running down an alley with the back of his shirt untucked from his pants.

As he kicks in the door, his shirt has tucked itself back into his pants.

During the rescue of Morpheus, at one point Trinity is seen to use both hands in controlling the flight stick of the helicopter.

While a helicopter normally requires use of two sticks to control, in the kind of emergency situation shown, the collective (controlling up/down motion) can be temporarily ignored.

Blood on Neo's mouth as the subway approaches.

When Neo is in the old Lincoln with Trinity, Switch, and Apoc, Trinity says, "Apoc, lights.

" A close-up of the light switch follows.

The external lights should be off because the switch is all the way in, yet it is night and the lights have been shown to be on.

Apoc then pulls the switch halfway out, which would turn on the exterior running lights only, not the interior lights.

He should've turned the switch, not pulled it.

On Neo's introduction to the Construct, Morpheus jacks him in, then shows up in the Construct himself almost immediately, far quicker than he could have jacked in himself.

But it's quite possible Neo was held in some kind of limbo until Morpheus was ready to join him.

When Neo is interrogated by the agents, the reflection in Agent Smith's glasses do not correspond to the action in the editing.

For instance, we see Neo standing in one shot, but the reflection in Agent Smith's glasses shows Neo sitting in the next shot.

When Neo is flushed from his cubicle and fished up with the claw from a hatch in the Nebuchadnezzar he is passed out.

But as he enters the ship he clearly moves his feet to avoid hitting the rim of the hatch.

When Morpheus escapes the military building he snaps his handcuffs but they remain on.

When Neo grabs Morpheus, in mid air, no handcuffs are visible.

The handcuffs re-appear when Neo drops Morpheus onto one hand.

When Neo opens fire from the helicopter, and the glass begins to break, none of the three agents is visible (though they should be) and the chair in which Morpheus should be sitting can be seen to be empty.

When Neo is being bugged the progression of the bug is inconsistent between shots.

As Morpheus introduces Neo to the Construct, his glasses are completely dark.

The following shot they suddenly turn highly reflective.

This was because, for that shot, the glasses were painted black to avoid the cameraman from being reflected in them.

After Neo is brought into the real world, Tank comes to introduce himself; while they're talking, the strap on Tank's right shoulder repeatedly jumps from the middle of his shirt sleeve to the edge between shots.

When Neo gives Agent Smith the finger, the position of his hand changes between shots.

Trinity is wearing a minidress over her tank top and vinyl pants that disappears when the group is first shown inside the wet-wall.

In the building the group returns to after seeing the Oracle, smoke appears around the hardline before it's cut by the agents (or by one of their minions).

Also, the amount of smoke is considerably more than wires that size could produce unless they were already on fire.

When Morpheus fights Agent Smith in the dilapidated bathroom, Agent Smith knocks him over onto an old toilet.

Before Morpheus's head hits the toilet, the outline of the section which is about to be "knocked out" is visible.

Also, the toilet can be seen to bend and wobble as Morpheus falls onto it, revealing it to be made of rubber (or at least something other than porcelain).

When Neo meets Trinity, Apoc, and Switch for the first time in the car, Trinity opens the car door, but when we cut back to Neo, she opens the door again.

When Morpheus takes Neo to meet the Oracle he reaches for the doorknob.

The doorknob reflects Morpheus reaching out to touch it, but you can also see a camera underneath his coat.

When Tank is about to shoot Cypher, the camera changes from showing Tank to Cypher.

When the camera is on Cypher, you can see it is his stunt double.

In the initial release of the movie on VHS tape, when Neo gets the mobile phone from the FedEx courier to talk to Morphius for the first time, a crew member's hand and forearm are clearly visible in the background.

This was corrected in subsequent releases on both VHS and DVD.

In the scenes after Neo lands on the roof from the helicopter, you see the helicopter in the background with the main rotors spinning.

In the next shot, Neo's back is to the camera with the shadow of the helicopter on the roof of the building, but there are no helicopter rotors fixed, or spinning.

When Smith shoots Neo outside room 303, Neo hits the wall and there is a blood smear on the wall but no bullet holes - a desert eagle would go right through Neo and in to the wall.

When Neo enters the Matrix for the first time on the Nebuchadnezzar with Morpheus, as he sits in the chair we clearly see Trinity lock his feet in place.

But when Neo pulls himself out of the Matrix during that same visit, he jumps out of the chair and no one can be seen releasing his feet.

In one shot where Neo fires the chain gun at the Agents, one jumps out of harm's way while firing his pistol.

While there is a flash, the pistol's action does not go back and there is no recoil like there should be, revealing it to be added in post-production.

Right after the "Dodge This!" line, Trinity shoots the agent in the head.

When she says this they show the agent look to the left and you can see the gun at the side of his head.

When the camera pulls away after she fires and shows the agent falling, he is falling backward and lands on his back.

You can see the bullet hole in the SWAT officer's forehead when the agent loses the connection.

Even if he turned his head, he still wouldn't have fallen backwards perfectly like he did.

During the scene where Cypher is sitting on Morpheus after betraying him, Morpheus is still plugged into the Matrix yet clearly blinks just before the scene cuts away.

It is visible even though the camera is not showing his face.

During the lobby shoot-out, despite having a limited number of weapons on their person, both Trinity and Neo discard several guns that have fired only a handful of rounds.

In the jump program, Neo falls off the building head first, but when he hits the ground he lands completely on his front side.

When Neo is firing his two custom Skorpion SA Vz 61 submachine guns during the lobby shoot out, the shot showing the casing falling to the floor shows rifle casings, likely 7.

62x51mm NATO (.

308 Winchester), when the Skorpion fires much smaller.

32 ACP pistol rounds.

When Neo does the famous "Matrix" move, where he bends back, but still on his feet while the agent shoots at him, he drops his guns right beforehand.

But while he's commencing the move, as the camera circles around the actor, you see no pistols anywhere near him.

But just as he falls the pistols are right beside him.

The physical effect of Neo's lifetime in a pod are understated, as his body would be much more severely atrophied from use.

However with this error in place, he would not be as helpless as a "newborn baby".

The physiology required to walk, comprehend vision and sound, control bowel movements, speak etc.

is well-developed by birth, with the later development taking place in the brain as the child matures.

Therefore it's a reasonable (if speculative) suggestion by the movie that these mental abilities would be retained by someone who first learned to do them in a "simulation" hooked into his brain, even if he had not made use of them.

Note particularly that even intravenously-fed individuals have to defecate and urinate, which given that Neo doesn't have any "plugs" for a colostomy or catheter means these functions of his body would have had plenty of practice.

Cypher discusses handing over Morpheus with Agent Smith at a restaurant in the Matrix.

However, it's taken for granted someone would have had to jack him into the Matrix and back out of the Matrix.

He or she would have also known that Cypher was conversing with an Agent by reading the Matrix code.

Cypher's betrayal would have become known.

Although the movie doesn't make it clear, Cypher was able to set up the system to jack himself in and leave again automatically.

This is what he's doing when he's interrupted by Neo, which is why he shuts off the monitors immediately.

When Neo is being run through the agent training program with the woman in the red dress, Morpheus' sunglasses reflect Neo with a Desert Eagle pistol being held up by an Agent standing in an empty sound stage, not the busy city they're supposed to be in.

No guns in this movie can be fired as fast as they are.

The bullets can be seen flying in bullet time and the action flies back, but the action wouldn't fly back until the bullet was through the target and wouldn't go that fast.

While this is true in reality, the scenes in question take place in a computer defined world where the guns can fire as fast as the computer will allow.

In the subway fight scene Smith throws Neo through a wooden wall of some sort.

When Smith grabs Neo's leg and pulls him out you can clearly see that it is Neo's stunt double.

- PLOTThe second time Morpheus calls Neo, he tells Neo the line is tapped, and asks him to go to meet Trinity at the Adams St.

bridge.

If the line was tapped, the agents should have had plenty of time to get to the bridge themselves.

When Neo and Trinity board the helicopter to go after Morpheus, Trinity is not wearing any gloves.

A minute later, when Trinity is piloting away from the building with Neo and Morpheus dangling from the helicopter, Trinity's hands are shown on the controls and she's wearing gloves.

The content of the screen are projected onto Neo's face but an ordinary monitor would never do that, one would need a projector to achieve this.

When Tank enters Neo's sleeping quarters the morning of Neo's training, his leather cell phone pouch and leather shoulder straps move from shot to shot.

Thomas Anderson is on the ledge outside the office windows.

He grabs onto the sheet metal column.

Hand prints are visible from previous takes.

The streets all have Chicago street names (as observed in Trivia section), including Balbo Avenue.

This street name is spelled correctly on signs in the subway station where Neo fights Agent Smith, but Tank directs Trinity and Neo to go to "Balboa" (as in _Rocky (1976)_ (qv)).

The DVD captions of Tank's dialogue also show it as "Balboa.

" An error in language really, the Oracle at Delphi (in Greece) prophesied with the words 'Know Thyself' above the entrance to the Temple of Apollo situated there.

But these words were in Greek, 'Gnothi se auton', not the Latin appearing on the sign in the movie.

It is incongruous to change the language for the film as the classical reference to The Oracle is then obscured for no reason.

The name of the software company Neo works at is spelled "METACORTEX" on the outside of the building, but a sign inside the building has it spelled "META CORTECHS".

Featurettes suggest that the name was changed to avoid an expensive legal issue; evidently one of the signs was missed.

Morpheus specifies the human body generates 25,000 BTUs of body heat.

The human body is constantly outputting heat into the environment so he should specify the rate of energy transfer rather than a total amount of energy being transferred.

Or he should specify how much time it takes for a human body to output 25,000 BTUs in order for any claims, regarding how much energy is extracted from humans, to be meaningful.

- PLOTThe reason why the machines use humans (a power source) makes no sense from a scientific point of view.

The useful energy extracted from the humans would necessarily be equal to or less than the energy expended in keeping them alive, even before we consider the energy expended in running the Matrix.

An alternative is provided in the novelization and the spin-off short story "Goliath"the machines use human brains as computer components, to run "sentient programs" (the Agents and various characters in the sequels) and to solve scientific problems.

Fans continue to debate the discrepancy, but there is no official explanation.

During the chase scene at the end of the movie, Neo steals a phone from a man in a black suit.

As he runs off, the man starts shouting and pointing at him.

When we see the man from behind, although he's still shouting in the same voice, the actor is clearly 'Hugo Weaving' (qv) as Agent Smith, with his gray suit and different hair cut.

The sound effect to indicate the transformation into Agent Smith isn't played until quite a few seconds after the change of actor and costume.

When all the people are in the wet-wall and Trinity pulls Neo and they all fall.

They drop to the bottom and there is dust and debris everywhere.

But through the dust you can see Trinity (or her stunt-double) come down and be pulled back up, like she was on a bungee cord or something.

Her back arches and you can see the "bounce" as she is pulled back up.

The mobile phone delivered to Neo is a Nokia 8110 and it does not have a automatic slide mechanism.

However this modification could be made easily (released tools) in services.

When Trinity learns how to fly the helicopter, she is given instructions to fly a B-212 (which is what's shown) with a Bell JetRanger (B-260) image on the computer.

The doorknob at the Oracle's apartment is installed backwards.

The screws are on the outside of the door, allowing a passer-by to take off the plate and remove the doorknob.

Normally the screws would be on the inside to prevent this.

As Neo and Morpheus dangle on a cable beneath the helicopter, one can clearly see the black cable running from Neo's waist, down Morpheus' arm, and under his sleeve to connect to a concealed safety harness under his clothing.

Morpheus states that a human "generates more energy than a 120V battery".

The voltage of a battery says nothing about its energy content on its own; for that, the battery's ampere-hour rating is needed.

When Neo is fighting the agent in the subway, and he is leaping out of the subway's path, you can clearly see him grasp the wires that are hoisting him up.

He pulls on them to make the backflip onto the platform.

When the bomb is detonated at the bottom of the elevator shaft the lobby is shown to be in pristine condition immediately before the explosion.

However, the lobby should be in shambles due to the previous shoot-out.

This is most noticeable when looking at the pillars after the shoot-out and during the explosion.

When Trinity crashes through the window and tumbles down the stairs, she's oriented facing forward and should land face down.

But when she rolls to a stop and points her guns back toward the window, she's face up.

When Neo gets the message on his computer to "follow the white rabbit", there is a knock on the door.

When Neo opens the door, its clearly visible that Neo is wearing lenses of different colors.

One eye is jet black and the other one looks green.

When Morpheus is showing Neo the "Real World" as he is sitting in the chair he looks up into the sky, in the reflection in his glasses you can see some crew members, a boom mic and some lighting before the camera looks upwards.

When Neo, Trinity, Cypher, Switch, and Apoc are escaping the building, and under fire from the SWAT teamApoc and Switch burst out of the wall in the basement, and neither are wearing their sunglasses (they abandoned them before entering the crawlspace in the wall).

Yet, when Trinity opens a grate in the floor and they escape through it, Apoc is clearly wearing his sunglasses again.

When the 3 agents fire their pistols at Neo and he stops them by holding his hand up and saying "No".

You can clearly see there are no rifling marks on any of the CGI bullets, nor on the real bullets that fall to the floor.

Rifling is a series of spiral grooves in gun barrels, that causes the bullet to spin (without which it would tumble, bending its path randomly); it leaves distinctive marks on bullets, which are used to match bullets to the guns that fired them.

During the flashback scene where Morpheus is describing to Neo the "peak of civilization", cars can be seen driving on the left hand side of the road.

This is due to the filming location being Sydney, Australia; and in fact that footage is of the Sydney Harbor Bridge.

When Neo is being interrogated by the agents, Agent Smith plops a folder on the table.

When he opens it, there are no pages on the back of the cover.

When the camera shifts as Agent Smith is looking through the pages, we see several pages on the back of the cover that Agent Smith never placed there.

However, the folder is an obvious reference to computer folders and the scene is a showcase for the fact that Agents are not human, but can manipulate things as computer programs.

The visible world is merely an interpretation of their digital actions.

In the jump scene when Neo is running at full speed, you can see the CGI cutout of him from the background.

It looks almost like a net around him.

When Smith discharges his desert eagle in Neo in room 303, the ejected cartridge casing is clearly a blank.

Also the cartridge loading next in the chamber is a blank.

This is shown in slow motion.

As Anderson is handed the FedEx envelope, we see him about to rip it open.

Next shot, he is holding it with both hands and reaches to rip it open again.

When Neo is first riding in the car in the rain, they stop and open the rear (suicide) door to show him a road that he "knows where it leads".

When they drive off, the front door closes.

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
26 September 1999 USA USD 171,479,930
19 September 1999 USA USD 171,383,253
12 September 1999 USA USD 171,321,460
5 September 1999 USA USD 171,229,547
29 August 1999 USA USD 171,051,684
15 August 1999 USA USD 170,416,506
8 August 1999 USA USD 169,731,136
1 August 1999 USA USD 168,932,002
25 July 1999 USA USD 168,220,229
18 July 1999 USA USD 167,910,762
11 July 1999 USA USD 167,505,401
4 July 1999 USA USD 166,784,866
27 June 1999 USA USD 165,688,406
20 June 1999 USA USD 163,869,151
13 June 1999 USA USD 161,367,685
6 June 1999 USA USD 158,260,745
30 May 1999 USA USD 154,764,576
23 May 1999 USA USD 149,507,510
16 May 1999 USA USD 145,138,521
9 May 1999 USA USD 138,505,386
2 May 1999 USA USD 129,715,015
25 April 1999 USA USD 117,082,992
18 April 1999 USA USD 98,946,842
11 April 1999 USA USD 73,310,417
4 April 1999 USA USD 37,352,692
USA USD 171,479,930
29 August 1999 UK GBP 16,918,842
22 August 1999 UK GBP 16,783,409
15 August 1999 UK GBP 16,555,986
8 August 1999 UK GBP 16,210,458
1 August 1999 UK GBP 15,772,288
25 July 1999 UK GBP 15,270,357
18 July 1999 UK GBP 14,592,885
11 July 1999 UK GBP 13,628,271
4 July 1999 UK GBP 12,337,315
27 June 1999 UK GBP 10,248,926
20 June 1999 UK GBP 7,342,530
13 June 1999 UK GBP 3,384,948
12 September 1999 Worldwide USD 203,600,000
29 August 1999 Worldwide USD 190,000,000
22 August 1999 Worldwide USD 185,000,000
15 August 1999 Worldwide USD 175,400,000
worldwide USD 463,517,383
Non-USA USD 292,037,453
Germany DEM 50,400,000
10 March 2003 Spain EUR 10,695,801
30 December 1999 Sweden SEK 34,207,647
25 November 1999 Sweden SEK 33,994,427
30 September 1999 Sweden SEK 31,820,632
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
4 April 1999 USA USD 27,788,331 2,849
13 June 1999 UK GBP 3,384,948 361
16 May 2003 Australia USD 84,179 92
23 May 2003 Europe USD 646,184 302
23 May 2003 Germany USD 646,184
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
27 June 1999 USA USD 1,011,566 1,139
20 June 1999 USA USD 1,315,856 1,365
13 June 1999 USA USD 1,869,930 1,907
6 June 1999 USA USD 2,453,642 2,045
30 May 1999 USA USD 3,830,026 2,102
23 May 1999 USA USD 2,875,521 2,521
16 May 1999 USA USD 4,548,484 2,715
9 May 1999 USA USD 5,881,558 2,860
2 May 1999 USA USD 8,715,866 2,903
25 April 1999 USA USD 12,642,717 2,903
18 April 1999 USA USD 17,941,314 2,903
11 April 1999 USA USD 22,563,331 2,903
4 April 1999 USA USD 27,788,331 2,849
29 August 1999 UK GBP 63,166 87
22 August 1999 UK GBP 94,139 109
15 August 1999 UK GBP 164,353 140
8 August 1999 UK GBP 245,823 181
1 August 1999 UK GBP 192,122 192
25 July 1999 UK GBP 291,008 282
18 July 1999 UK GBP 457,119 335
11 July 1999 UK GBP 676,915 366
4 July 1999 UK GBP 1,079,406 356
27 June 1999 UK GBP 1,543,185 361
20 June 1999 UK GBP 2,275,576 361
13 June 1999 UK GBP 3,384,948 361

Comentarios

When the Wachowskis released "The Matrix" in 1999, it marked the dawn of a new age for the science fiction and action genres with the numerous technical and aesthetic innovations it contributed to the film industry. These would go on to earn it the widespread recognition of being one of the most important films of its generation, as well as quite arguably one of the greatest sci-fi films of its generation.

Released as a super hit American-Australian sci-fi and action film directed by The Wachowski Brothers, The Matrix is super hit for popularizing a visual effect known as digitally enhanced simulation of variable-speed. Matrix is for the people who were waiting to catch up with the graphic potential of comic books.

The Matrix would only need people to change. A program cannot change itself it needs an outside human agency to make a change.

Technically flawless. Another example of the trend of satisfying the culturally deep-rooted links from adolescents with fantasy of British-Scandinavian origin.

The matrix is a groundbreaking movie that not only raised the bar for all sci-fi movies, but also redefined the genre of action, both in its action scenes and its revolutionary visual effects. It is one of the most thought-provoking, creative, creative, influential, and stylish movies ever made, and it is also full of philosophical and religious allegories.

"The Matrix" is among the best sci-fi films ever to come out of Hollywood. In it, a hacker learns the truth about the nature of reality and joins the fight for the freedom of the human race.

I probably haven't studied any other film from the end of the 20th century more than I have "The Matrix:" as a philosophical, political and religious text as genre entry from cyberpunk, to noir (or "neo" noir), and even superhero flick and as reflexive visual-effects spectacle, mainly, while recently reviewing it for its "Alice in Wonderland" allusions. One of the most influential films of its day and, indeed, ever, I also find it continually interesting and thrilling.

From March 1999, to November 2003, The Wachowskis have made the masterpiece trilogy known as The Matrix that doesn't suffer from cute characters such as Yoda and Jar Jar. It has no more than three films (Excluding Animatrix), which makes it not as bloated.

Comentarios