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Matrix Revolutions

Let me just say this,

At the end, you’re gonna ask yourself,

“What the F*CK?

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By: Corsair166b - 14th November 2003 at 04:52

I was dissappointed…I thought it would end in a more spectaular fashion…good effects, though. Money better spent on ‘School of Rock’ with Jack Black, no one I know has NOT liked that movie…it is funny!

Looking forward immensely to Lord of the Rings 3, this is the trilogy to beat as far as I’m concerned.

Mark

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By: P38 Peter - 12th November 2003 at 22:41

Naff!

Now I love special effects and “All American Blowing **** Up” but I have to say I was left disapointed. Maybe i am growing up (Heaven forbid), but it did feel a teensy bit like they were just making a money spinner for the sake of it, not a decent ending to the story. The special effects were superb, but without a great story line….

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By: DazDaMan - 12th November 2003 at 22:12

So… what would that make me then?? :confused:

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By: Kat - 12th November 2003 at 20:11

Re: the matrix explained

Originally posted by ichi
Here you go guys…. hope this helps

The Matrix Reloaded – Explained…

Yawn….;)

….would’ve ended up god knows where, but certainly not attached to the Twin’s body
==========
Regards
~ichi

Anything that needs this much explaination obviously doesn’t really respect the casual cinema goer (as opposed to the obsessive annorak)! 😀

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By: DazDaMan - 11th November 2003 at 22:53

Ahh…. that explains it then! I think…! 😉

Anyway, I don’t have to explain why I liked it – I just did. It kicked ASS! 😀

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By: ichi - 11th November 2003 at 22:36

the matrix explained

Here you go guys…. hope this helps

The Matrix Reloaded – Explained…
Zion is a program, just like the Matrix. How is Neo able to figure out that he is able to stop the sentinels in Zion near the end of the film? The spoon given to him earlier. It had obviously been bent loads, but how outside the Matrix?? This gave Neo the inspiration and the understanding that Zion is still a matrix.

The One explained
The One” is a program, but has to be “attached” to someone in the Matrix. So Mr. Anderson got it in the 6th version of the Matrix. Then “The One” program’s purpose is to allow Zion to be destroyed then to rebuild it. The reason for this is because of anomalies – the 1% of humans that don’t accept the Matrix. These are all brought out of the Matrix program and into the Zion program by the “Morpheus” program and other similar “ship captain” programs. Then once all the anomalies are out of the Matrix (and in Zion), that is the time for Zion to be destroyed, thus killing all the anomalies off. The Matrix is then upgraded, thus creating the next version of the Matrix, but Zion must be rebuilt so that the next lot of anomalies can be brought out again so that they can be destroyed. This is the feedback-loop, and is the reason to retain a handful of people so that Zion can be rebuilt. So this is why Neo said the prophecy was a lie – the One’s purpose was not to end the war as the prophecy stated. Unfortunately, “The One” program must be re-used each time, or copied, so it can be “attached” to a new anomaly inside the Matrix. So what happens to the old “The One” program? It faces deletion, and as the Oracle explained, it goes into exile instead, just like the French bloke (the Merovingian) did. He was the first One (probably from the second version of the Matrix), and once he fulfilled his duty, he became an exile program and “abdicated” his “Oneness” by choosing Persephone and power. This is evident in the bogs when Persephone asks Neo to kiss her. She says she wants him to kiss her so she can feel what it is like again to be kissed by something close to human, just like the Merovingian used to be. Then she says to Trinity that she envies her, but that these things are not meant to last. So the Merovingian used to be just like Neo – a One – thus proving further the feedback-loop explained earlier.

The correct door in the Architect’s room
Now there are two possibilities here:

1. All the previous One’s chose the right door allowing a dissemination” of their code into the Matrix (i.e., the code they “carry” thus indicating Neo is indeed human), then he must select (unplug) 23 people from the Matrix to rebuild Zion. This takes away the possibility that stories from previous rebuilds of Zion will be carried through. But Morpheus indicated in the first Matrix that this is the case anyway. He said, “there was a man born inside, able to change things, it was he who freed the first of us,” – basically the One previous to Neo. And this proves that the previous One chose the right door also. Neo’s purpose is also to choose the right door, but he does not because he faces deletion afterwards and has the choice of going into exile – programs choosing to go into exile is the one thing that can’t be accounted for in program parameters. Thus, he chooses the left door instead this time. How was Neo able to choose the other door? Because of his extreme willpower? – Even the Architect indicated that he’d noticed this – “Interesting. That was quicker than the others.” Or more likely, because the Oracle upgraded his coding with the candy on the park bench. The candy/cookie was a method to change the One’s program. She said he has made a believer out of her – this is quite human-like and perhaps the previous One’s didn’t accept the upgrade candy, now she has hope… hope that Neo will finally choose the other door.

2. All the previous One’s chose the left door, saving Trinity and letting Zion fall. So this time is no different. But the Architect does say, “You are here because Zion is about to be destroyed. Its every living inhabitant terminated, its entire existence eradicated,” and also, “this will be the sixth time we have destroyed it, and we have become exceedingly efficient at it,” – assuming the Architect isn’t lying, then they have already destroyed Zion (i.e., Zion has fallen) five times – i.e., the result of going through the left door.

Morpheus and Trinity are programs.
Morpheus’s purpose was to find the One and deliver him to the Architect. Trinity’s purpose is to control the One by getting in love with him. Trinity is supposed to be the mother of the new One every time the Matrix is Reloaded. That’s why the sex scene was so important and why she was named Trinity. The Architect says, “she is going to die, and there is nothing that you can do to stop it.” He was correct though because she did die just like Neo did in the first Matrix (Oracle said he or Morpheus would, and she didn’t lie, but he came back to life). Trinity dies, but comes back to life (we are using medical definition of death in all this of course!). The Architect has already laid down an ultimatum for Neo choosing the left door:

The Architect – “Failure to comply with this process will result in a cataclysmic system crash killing everyone connected to the matrix, which coupled with the extermination of Zion will ultimately result in the extinction of the entire human race.”

Neo – “You won’t let it happen, you can’t. You need human beings to survive.”

The Architect – “There are levels of survival we are prepared to accept. However, the relevant issue is whether or not you are ready to accept the responsibility for the death of every human being in this world.”

Looking at this further, the Architect does say “coupled” with the extermination of Zion will the human race be exterminated. So he says everyone connected to the Matrix will die, but if Zion is not exterminated, the human race will not necessarily die. Also, there is likely to be a time-window between not going through the right door, and the cataclysmic crash, thus allowing Neo to unplug as many as possible from the Matrix, then those people won’t die. This will be the start of the next Zion. As for the Matrix, a cataclysmic crash doesn’t mean the end of the Matrix – just needs rebooting or reloading!

Agent Smith explained
Agent Smith is the only “human” in this world. He’s the one spreading himself like a virus replicating himself over and over until the Matrix will finally get overloaded and fail. Smith is the one who wants to get out of the Matrix for good. He said so in the first Matrix, “I must get out of here, I must get free! And in this mind, is the key,” squeezing Morpheus’s temples, “my key! Once Zion is destroyed, there is no need for me to be here!” Smith knows that by killing Neo he can escape the Matrix because Neo is the key to resetting the Matrix, or to shut it off. It was originally killing Neo (in the first Matrix) that allowed Smith to become powerful (cloning ability) – so killing Neo again will allow him to gain Neo’s powers completely, and thus gain the power to shut down the Matrix.

So where the hell did Smith come from if he wants to destroy the Matrix? He’s obviously not meant to be there – he’s a computer virus as he has every characteristic of a virus – he multiplies and spreads and infects (and emulates) other programs like one. He is exactly as he described humans at the end of the first Matrix – “You move to an area and you multiply and multiply until every natural resource is consumed and the only way you can survive is to spread to another area. There is another organism on this planet that follows the same pattern. Do you know what it is? A virus.”

But who put him there? This will only be revealed in Revolutions (Revelations?) I guess – but I’m betting on humans in the real real world, i.e., outside of Zion and the Matrix. They’re at war with the machines and trying to destroy them by infecting them with this virus – Agent Smith. So the irony with this theory is that Agent Smith represents the human race!! Neo represents the machines! Agent Smith says to Neo just after he’s seen the Oracle that he became free when Neo destroyed him in the first Matrix (remember when Neo entered his body and exploded him from inside out) – as a virus, Smith has the ability to “inherit” other programs’ abilities and thus inherited some of Neo’s.

The anomaly explained
The anomaly is all the humans that do not accept the Matrix. The Architect says “Your life is the sum of a remainder of an unbalanced equation inherent to the programming of the matrix. You are the eventuality of an anomaly, which despite my sincerest efforts I have been unable to eliminate from what is otherwise a harmony of mathematical precision. While it remains a burden to sedulously avoid it, it is not unexpected, and thus not beyond a measure of control.”

This includes Neo, but Neo’s Matrix avatar is attached with the One program so that he can follow his purpose as explained earlier under “The One explained”. However, he is also supposed to protect himself and destroy anything that gets in his way – i.e., Agent Smith – so that he may fulfil his purpose. Further proving Neo – and other non-accepters of the Matrix – are the anomaly, the Architect says, “Your life is the sum of a remainder of an unbalanced equation inherent to the programming of the matrix.”
The clue here is Neo’s program name – “The One”. Take one-third for example. 1 over 3 is 0.33333 recurring. A computer cannot deal with recurring numbers, so must accept a limit, let’s say 0.33333 for argument’s sake. Multiply by 3, you get 0.99999 – never 1.00000, where has the “remainder” 0.00001 (One) gone? This is the limitation of computers, this is the mathematical imprecision inherent in programming (of the Matrix) and the eventuality of the One anomaly unable to be eliminated.

What is the equation then?
Not sure, but it definitely involves pi. The Keymaker refers to the window of time to open the door to the mainframe as 314 seconds. 3.14 is pi to three sig. figs., or the number of radians in half a circle. Half a circle is like the cross-section of a womb, similar to the alcove of Neo and Trinity’s love scene – conceiving the next One? “NEO”, incidently, is an anagram of “ONE”. Trinity and Neo – one on one; a choice – one or one. Leads us to 101. “101” is mentioned numerous times in Matrix 1 and Reloaded. Neo’s room at the beginning, Merovingian is on the 101st floor, the 101 freeway of the car chase in Reloaded, then when Trinity is hacking into the power plant system, she resets the password to Z10N0101. Freaky. Indicates that she is a program because that’s not some random password she’s put in. 101 is binary for 5, which in zero-based binary counting: 000 is 1, 001, is 2, 010 is 3, 011 is 4, 100 is 5, 101 is 6 – And this is the 6th version of the Matrix! Then there’s 303. 303 is the room Neo got shot in Matrix 1, the Oracle lives in room 303, it’s also the hotel room number Trinity is in in Matrix 1 and it’s seen at the end when Neo fights the Agents and Smith and begins to literally see the code that makes up the Matrix.
101 x 3 = 303, a trilogy, 3 + 0 + 3 = 6 = the 6th Matrix. Trinity means 3.

Who is the “mother” that the Architect refers to?
The Architect says, “Please,” in an almost disapproving sense when Neo suggests the Oracle, but does not reveal who it really is or even directly that Neo is wrong. The architect was the one who created the Matrix; the co-creator is neither Persephone nor the Oracle. Both of them are only programs that have a purpose in the matrix, just like the rest. The Architect is in charge of the Matrix world and the co-creator is in charge of Zion. She has almost the same age as the Architect. Therefore, that woman is the Head Counsellor, the only woman of importance that lives in Zion and the one who asked for the two captains to volunteer at the council meeting. She’s the one who knew all along about the Matrix. She was the one who told Zion’s Defence Minister to cool off and to let Morpheus do his work so things could go as planned. Or alternatively, it could indeed be the Oracle. She is the only program that truly wants humans to have a free choice… at the same time, she sees the future, because she knows the program code – she is like God – which is why Seraph protects her – see “Who is Seraph?” below.

What’s so special about Neo’s avatar?
Neo is a skilled hacker, and his avatar in the Matrix is based on the person that founded the AI of the original machines that eventually took over the world… How? Take a look at the disc he gave to the bloke at the door at the beginning of Matrix 1. It said “DISC AI” on it.

The hollowed book Neo takes the disc out of is “Simulacra and Simulation” – a collection of essays by the French postmodernist philosopher Jean Baudrillard. He opens it to the section “on Nihilism” (meaning nothing is truly known, etc.). “Baudrillard’s concept of simulation is the creation of the real through conceptual or ‘mythological’ models which have no connection or origin in reality. The model becomes the determinant of our perception of reality–the real.” And Morpheus says, “Welcome to the desert of the real,” in Matrix 1. I’d say this book describes The Matrix to a tee. So this disc contains the key to the AI, and thus how to destroy the machines, so I think they’ll use this info in Revolutions to ultimately destroy the machines, which means he’ll have to go back to the nightclub and find the guy he gave it to.

Who is Seraph?
The reason Seraph (the Chinese guy Neo meets before meeting the Oracle) had golden code and was so spectacular is that he came from the first incarnation of the matrix, which was heaven. “Seraph” is singular for the plural “seraphim”. The seraphim are the highest choir of angels and included amongst others: Lucifer, Gabriele, Raziel and Malaciah, and they sit on the 8th level of Heaven just one below God. So Seraph will obviously have a big part in Revolutions, but whose side will he be on – the machines or the humans?? That is the question.

The Twins
They are exiled programs that emulate the human myth of ghosts as the Oracle explained. They are programs behaving badly. Persephone killed one of the Merovingian’s bodyguards with a silver bullet because he was emulating a werewolf. So if the Twins could phase into ghost form, why didn’t he when his arm was trapped in the door of the garage? Was it because he was wounded or because he can’t phase when his arm is trapped? No of course not. The doors of that building, when shut, always led somewhere else (usually in the mountains) when opened again without the Keymaker’s key. So if it were slammed shut due to the Twin phasing into ghost form, the Twin’s arm would’ve ended up god knows where, but certainly not attached to the Twin’s body
==========
Regards
~ichi

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By: dartie - 11th November 2003 at 02:50

Im going to see it soon! after i finish school for this year!

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By: DazDaMan - 10th November 2003 at 10:14

Goddamit, Harry, you ask for the same things over and over of the Wachowskis, then whinge that you got something else that disappointed you?? How ungrateful is that??

Revolutions was exactly that – a revolution, ie, a complete change in outlook, social habits or circumstances (Chambers Dictionary).

I was very surprised by the lack of in-Matrix scenes, but still not disappointed. The fight for Zion, yes, it was awesome. The lack of hand-to-hand fighting, too, was a welcome change, as the main storyline was the fight against the machines, and I do feel sometimes that there was too much in the second film.

I thought it was a brilliant, rousing and emotionally-charged end to the trilogy. OK, some bits aren’t fully explained, but what the heck! You can get the whole lot on DVD in six months, and the Animatrix AND the Enter The Matrix computer game (which both apparently explain some things which the films do not), and figure it out for yourselves then.

Meantime, I’m just gonna enjoy watching the first two over. And over. Might go and see the third part again, too…!

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By: Arabella-Cox - 6th November 2003 at 20:10

I’m going to see it next week or so and i’m getting really negative vibes from you all. Sure it can’t be that bad, can it?

Special effects – Oh yes! Prolly the best ever.
Reloaded style fight scenes – No. Don’t expect much from the last scene either.
More implicit and theoretical concepts – Unfortunately.
Flow – Not too good.
Ending – Not what you expect or want.
Explicit and clear cut explanations for whatever the hell happened – No!!

The most disappointing part is that the conclusion would normally be expected to end the thinking process forced into the viewer by the previous movie, with very explicit revelations. That does not happen and instead, only the small sequence of events that have occured, end.

However, the defense of Zion is worth watching the whole movie for.

That is what’s happen to me for the first one

Company at last! I thought the first one was’nt too impressive either. Reloaded was good but they gave too much away in the trailers and previews.

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By: Hand87_5 - 6th November 2003 at 16:28

Originally posted by ELP
I almost fell asleep in parts of the second movie.

That is what’s happen to me for the first one. I bought the video for the kids , I tried to watch it 2 or 3 times and felt asleep every time.

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By: KabirT - 6th November 2003 at 16:24

Originally posted by ELP
I almost fell asleep in parts of the second movie.

the second movie was totaly bogus.

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By: NTW - 6th November 2003 at 10:58

I’m going to see it next week or so and i’m getting really negative vibes from you all. Sure it can’t be that bad, can it?

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By: Nikumba - 6th November 2003 at 10:50

Saw the film last night, I thought it was a very good film, and yes the ending is a tad confusing but me and my mates figured it all out in the end.

Its a shame with the big budget they made several errors with the editing.

But overall an outstanding trilogy

Nikumba

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By: Arthur - 6th November 2003 at 10:44

So Keanu Reeves doesn’t reveal he is actually still Ted ‘Theodore’ Logan from Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure and or Bill and Ted’s Bugus Journey?

So Bill S. Preston ‘Esquire’ doesn’t show up either?

He doesn’t get back to the highschool at San Dimas in the end?

Like, total bummer, dude!

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By: Flood - 6th November 2003 at 01:42

Haven’t seen them.
Not interested in seeing them. (Um, Keynu ‘wooden’ Reeves is in them, I hear…)
Might glance at them if/when they appear on TV.
Haven’t bought the francised burger either. Or the quilt cover. Or the sandwich box. Or the mouse mat.:D:D:D:D:D:D
Sorry. I’m sure there’ll be another hyped up craze for everyone to jump on the back of rolling past shortly…:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes: (Lord of the Rings – The Fluffy Things Strike Back anyone? Or Nightmare on Elm Street part 37 – Freddy Sues his Agent?)

Flood.

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By: crobato - 6th November 2003 at 01:33

You can do with the religious mumbo jumbo the first time, when you reach to the second or worst the third time, you’re over doing it. Just how far you can go with the “Chosen” thing—a common clique with geek flicks.

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By: ELP - 6th November 2003 at 00:50

I almost fell asleep in parts of the second movie.

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By: SOC - 6th November 2003 at 00:47

Not what was expected. Not impressed.

On a side note, think about the movie for a bit. Like all three of them. Then ask yourself, “just how religious are them Whackowski bros?”

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By: Arabella-Cox - 5th November 2003 at 23:26

As a “movie” it was great but failed or did’nt even make an attempt to explain so much that was brought up by the theme.

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By: wannabe pilot - 5th November 2003 at 22:38

Just got back from the 6:00pm showing at my local cinema, and thought it was excellent. It takes a lot of concentration but it ended more or less how I expected, nothing too surprising. There were a few points that I didn’t get, but if you can find someone to explain everything that happens and why, in the Matrix, then they can’t really have a life!

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