THE MATRIX RESURRECTIONS 2021 REVIEW - AFDAH INFO


Warner Bros. has long wished to make another "Matrix" picture, but the Vachovsky brothers - the builders of a cyberpunk classic whose appeal is based primarily on the rules and the right to question - have resisted the urge. He insisted on their saying whatever they wanted. With the first three flicks. Remember, at the conclusion of the trilogy, the Trinity is dead, Neo has sacrificed himself, and mankind has been liberated from their virtual constraints, which means anybody who wants to continue the story may. Hopefully, they had their job cut for them. Matrix Resurrections Afdah


It depicts a magnificent moment of self-awareness at the start of "The Matrix Resurrection," a pleasant but undeniably fourth chapter that is more than a patch on a previous series, a déjà vu that improves not as a bug, but as a feature. The brands. Employees of a San Francisco video game business sit around a corporate conference table in that scene, debating how to develop the Matrix story. "Our beloved parent business, Warner Bros., has chosen to develop a trilogy sequel," one says, adding that the corporation intends to do it "with or without" the founders.


If you can't defeat them, join them, appears to be the message from filmmaker Lana Vachovsky, who brilliantly retreats from the gleaming infinity mirror shown in earlier films to expose another layer: the real reality we live in. Unfortunately, this is as wacky and/or meta as "The Matrix Resurrection," while the rest is similar: more time- and seriousness-preventing action, more Gothic fashion. More "free your mind" nonsense, please.


The new film is sophisticated but considerably less passionate in scope than the previous two sequels, being essentially a fantastic hit concert and a cover version bundled into one (complete with flashback footage from prior chapters to high spots). Where those films are meant to break through the limits of sound in our minds, such as "Bullet Time," the highway sequence, and New's last struggle against a seemingly infinite number of Agent Smith, it stifles creativity on a broad scale. Instead, the "resurrection" soothes the familiar, removing the emotional core of a world that is always a bit hollow.


In summary, Vachovsky doesn't add much to the rich fiction that he and Sister Lily have created, but he is cautious not to disrupt it.


"Resurrection" is their newest film, combining repetition with "simulation" by resurrecting New (Keenu Reeves), Trinity (Carrie-Ann Moss), and a number of other important characters (some, like Agent Smith and Morpheus, require new actors to come in). Elon Musk's notion of oxygen, video game technology is growing at such a rapid pace that chances are you are now living in one. The difference between "Matrix 1.0" and "Matrix 2.0" is that the "sheep" in the film's brave new world know potentially liberating information, but they chose to sleepwalk through their existence. similar to you. Since 1999, storytelling has developed through Quantum Leap, and what previously felt like a "Matrix" franchise now appears weird, what happened with the introduction of "Reality TV" (Paris Hilton's current example). Consider the assertion that she is playing a character (with) and ontological shows such as "The Good Place" and "The Oye" (which subsequently concluded with the characters crossing over to a new dimension, where she featured on the show). "The Matrix" may have been inspired by the 1982 film "Tron," but even that series has changed, leaving it in the dust.


This is not to suggest that the sequel is just "The Matrix Recycled," while the title does allude to (but never explicitly address) the Christian dimension of New Old's journey as much as it is biblical. Is also relevant. Off-screen, Lana Vachovsky fully rediscovers herself in the meantime, much of which is shared through Netflix's great "Sense 8," while Thomas Anderson is in the midst of a pretty worldwide mid-life crisis. I'm having trouble answering questions since I'm locked in indoctrinated mode.


Anderson pulls his legs as Morpheus (now sculpted by "Candyman" star Yahya Abdul-Matin II) opens the door and attempts to provide him with In terms of green, the phosphorescent light that characterizes the trio (extrapolated from old-school CRT monitors) has been erased. Yes, a torrent of green glyphs writes out the original titles, and Zion's human remnants (played by numerous "Sense 8" cast members) investigate the New and Trinity symbols on ancient displays. But, in comparison to the horrifying and serious "real world" that survived the Sentinel attack in "Revolutions," the scene in which Anderson reunites with the Trinity - is now married with children and goes by the name Tiffany (but still by Moss). Played) - has a lot of colors and details. It's odd that it should seem so cheap, with no distinct aesthetic mark. the old red-bullet wisdom. Meanwhile, his contraction (Neil Patrick Harris as an analyst) has provided him with a consistent supply of blue tablets. Then there's Bugs (Jessica Hanwick), a sharp young cyber-anarchist who escapes an evident trap "model" or training exercise in which she saves the new-and-improved Morpheus (Abdul-Matin is great). However, it seems.


It's been more than two decades since The Matrix sounded the alarm. So, what are you doing in shackles with whatever job/family/hobby you're numbing for something truly important? In this current simulation, fans, like spectators, who witness the heroes destroying the system rather than participating in social progress, stay blind. New has reverted to its Thomas Anderson persona, most recently serving as the head designer at Deus Machine, a gaming firm owned by WB, and has been described as a "bleeding nerd," however it is still the tick that fans watch. Rock star bangs and a surfer-guru beard


It would be fantastic to see Reeves as an elderly man with greying hair and a dandruff-specified turtleneck - or, even better, as a self-deprecating version, as he did in the Netflix rom-com "Always Stay." 


Far from the gloomy realism of film noir vibes, it's easy to envision people being tempted by such a scene, especially when introduced in the magic-hour brilliance of recent Marvel films - and against which the gritty post-apocalyptic environment of spacecraft. And human pods appear to be less appealing than previously. This has always been an issue with the "Matrix" films: they argue that coming up to life is worse than an illusion, encouraging us to be concerned about the fate of the garbage dump, where brain-connected humans serve as energy sources for the machines. Are


Of course, we'd want to see San Francisco - or Berlin, where the filming has shifted. Instead of battling black actor Hugo Weaving's square-jawed guy (the actual Agent Smith only appears in flashbacks), Anderson Smith now fights black actor Hugo Weaving's square-jawed man (Jonathan Grove, whose good looks reinforce the notion that Everything received a major aesthetic upgrade). Far from the gloomy realism of film noir vibes, it's easy to envision people being tempted by such a scene, especially when introduced in the magic-hour brilliance of recent Marvel films - and against which the gritty post-apocalyptic environment of spacecraft. And human pods appear to be less appealing than previously. This has always been an issue with the "Matrix" films: they argue that coming up to life is worse than an illusion, encouraging us to be concerned about the fate of the garbage dump, where brain-connected humans serve as energy sources for the machines. Are


Of course, we'd want to see San Francisco - or Berlin, where the filming has shifted. Instead of battling black actor Hugo Weaving's square-jawed guy (the actual Agent Smith only appears in flashbacks), Anderson Smith now fights black actor Hugo Weaving's square-jawed man (Jonathan Grove, whose good looks reinforce the notion that Everything received a major aesthetic upgrade).


Lana Vachovsky has stated that following the loss of her parents, she decided to produce a "Matrix" sequel for the consolation of rejoining with the fictitious family New and Trinity. Most viewers would agree, however it would be more logical to reinvent the characters with a completely new cast. Instead of finding a means to take obsessive add-on fans to the next level in a world where "space jam" can hack into the "matrix" IP, focus on justifying its existence. He appears to be on the go.