Matrix, The: Generation (2023)

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Matrix, The: Generation (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

We are living in a computer

programmed reality

and the only clue we have to it is

when some variable is changed

and some alteration in our

reality occurs.

If you find this world bad,

you should see some of the others.

When the cult science fiction writer

Philip K. d*ck imagined

that the whole world was

a computer program

and that we were actually living

in a simulation,

he anticipated the storyline of one

of the most influential sagas

of the last 20 years:

The Matrix.

And today, reality has caught up

with this idea, has it not?

Computers have become

an extension of ourselves,

our avatars provide us

with a second life in a virtual world

and the very term Matrix

has entered our vocabulary.

It makes you wonder if we're not

already living inside the Matrix...

Over 4 films, The Matrix has transcended

the realm of cinema

to become a cultural

and societal phenomenon.

The series captured the challenges

and anxieties of our digital age

in an unparalleled fashion.

And it had a huge influence

on our generation.

A connected, hybrid generation

that ceaselessly questions reality...

to the point of paradox.

We come from the 80s, brought up

on TV and the first video games,

but without cell phones

or the Internet.

As teenagers, many of us found ourselves

drawn to the melancholy grunge of Nirvana

or the rawness

of Rage Against The Machine,

protest bands critical

of the American way of life.

So when The Matrix was released

we were suspicious,

expecting a mindless action movie,

yet another formulaic blockbuster.

But what we discovered was

a truly enigmatic piece of cinema.

When we left the theater,

everyone had their own interpretation.

Like Neo, we wondered what had

just happened to us:

the film was a real aesthetic shock,

and it challenged us.

On top of that, it had a soundtrack from

our generation, which we really liked!

When it was released in March '99,

people feared a major computer breakdown.

The so-called Y2K bug threatened

to plunge the planet into an apocalypse,

simply because computers were unable

to pass into the third millennium.

Even though nothing came of the Y2K bug

and machines didn't take over humanity,

it was the first time that digital

technology had the capacity

to derail our reality

on a global scale!

The Matrix was directed

by the Wachowskis.

It depicts a dystopia in which artificial

intelligences enslave humans

by "farming" them for energy.

The machines keep humanity

at peace in the Matrix

by creating a simulated

reality, an illusion.

To combat this system, a group of rebels,

stranded in a ruinous world,

hack into the virtual world

to regain control of reality.

We are in.

The story focuses on the awakening of Neo,

a computer hacker played by Keanu Reeves.

His spiritual guide, Morpheus,

presents him with a difficult choice:

whether or not to question what

he has always been told is real.

You take the blue pill,

the story ends.

You wake up in your bed and believe

whatever you want to believe.

You take the red pill,

you stay in Wonderland

and I show you how deep

the rabbit hole goes.

Remember, all I'm offering

is the truth, nothing more.

This isn't real.

What is real?

How do you define real?

Through the trajectory of its hero,

the film questions the relationship

between humans and their machines,

and the porosity between reality

and the virtual.

Neo never ceases to untangle truth

from falsehood.

Is he the One as suggested,

or just another individual?

Are the machines the embodiment

of evil, or just like him?

The film was a worldwide success.

Awarded 4 Oscars, The Matrix spawned

a series of animated shorts

featuring the best directors

in the genre...

Animatrix.

The film led to two sequels,

Reloaded and Revolutions.

And the Matrix universe kept expanding

with the addition of comic books

and video games.

Conceived as a transmedia project,

the works complemented each other.

The Matrix became an extended universe,

just like its illustrious predecessor...

But most of all, the two sagas both tackle

major philosophical themes

through heroes on a quest

to discover themselves.

There is no try.

Just as Star Wars evoked

the Cold w*r,

with its battle of Good against

the Evil Galactic Empire,

The Matrix reflected an era

in which technology

leads to both the best

and the worst outcomes.

The 90s were full

of technology-related anxieties.

In the film Strange Days, people could use

a device to record videos of criminal acts

directly from their own cerebral cortexes.

The Lawnmower Man plunged us into

the first excesses of virtual reality.

Like the main character

in The Truman Show,

who was trapped in a reality TV show

from birth,

the more we are assisted by machines,

the more we lose control of our lives.

But there's something very singular

about The Matrix.

A little like Neo, who uses software to

teach his avatar to master martial arts,

The Matrix is a kind

of augmented film,

infused with the popular culture

of the time.

- I think he likes it!

- Yes.

The Wachowskis' saga was influenced

by cyberpunk science fiction,

starting with Ridley Scott's Blade Runner,

adapted from the beloved Philip K. d*ck.

Deckard battles a replicant, an android

created in the image of a man.

Neo, on the other hand,

battles Agent Smith,

who takes on a human form when

he is in fact a computer program.

The films also draw on visual references

taken from Tech Noir,

which blends science fiction

and film noir,

Dark City is a prime example

of the genre.

Some of its sets were reused

on the set of The Matrix.

There were also references

to comic books,

notably illustrations from Grant

Morrison's The Invisibles,

which was a direct inspiration.

The Matrix also drew

inspiration from Asia.

It was the first major film to borrow

so openly from Japanese anime,

in particular Ghost in the Shell,

which inspired graphic motifs,

themes and the interplay between

the organic and the mechanical.

The 2017 live-action version retained

the spirit of the original masterpiece.

In The Matrix, too, the body is a shell

that can transform and change.

Lastly, the references to Hong Kong

action cinema are obvious.

The characters seem to be

masters of time.

They can speed it up or slow it down,

much like in the films of John Woo,

the master of the genre.

The famous slow-motion sh**t

of The k*ller,

Hard boiled and Face/off

take on a new stylistic dimension

in The Matrix, with its weightless bodies.

In fact, Yuen Woo Ping, a leading

figure in Hong Kong cinema,

was asked by the Wachowskis to choreograph

the video-game-style superhuman fights.

In 2003, Charlie Rose,

PBS's leading cultural journalist,

devoted a special program

to the saga,

even before the release

of the third installment.

The 3 main actors and the producer

discussed The Matrix phenomenon,

and in particular its unprecedented

approach to martial arts in Hollywood;

in the films the actors performed

their own martial arts.

Each character has their

own distinctive style.

What's the Scorpion Kick?

It's my... Will Ping gave me this kick

called the Scorpion kick,

which is the last kick I do when I reach

the guy's legs and I kick him over my...

He gave us all moves.

He gave each character a signature move.

Agent Smith is very aggressive

and he's punching.

Keanu has a triple kick that he does.

He goes up and there's always

a triple kick.

I have something called an eagle

where I go up in the air like this.

So it was also defining

for all of our characters.

The great achievement of The Matrix lay

in interweaving two distinct universes

into a perfectly coherent whole.

A feat that culminates in a visual and

sound aesthetic that would become iconic.

The Matrix ushered in a new era of

computer-assisted cinema in the 2000s,

following on from Terminator 2's

terrifying T1000 CGI

and Steven Spielberg's

realistic dinosaurs.

Like the hero of Jurassic Park,

the film plays on our ambivalence

towards technology.

We are ready to try again.

I hate computers.

Feeling's mutual.

The Matrix was sh*t on a limited

budget of $60 million,

when other blockbusters of the time,

such as Armageddon,

cost more than twice as much.

The film explored innovative techniques

such as the "b*llet time" effect,

which was to become its trademark.

The Matrix inspired a host of films.

These films also manipulated time

and space using digital technology:

Charlie's Angels,

the Spartans of 300,

the suspended b*ll*ts of Wanted.

Or Lisbeth Salander

from the Millenium saga,

who doesn't seem

so different from Trinity:

both are punk rebels, experts in

computer hacking as well as flying.

Combined with parody nods from Scary

Movie, The Simpsons and Shrek,

the film was established

as a pop culture classic.

And 23 years later, in Babylon,

the Matrix entered the pantheon

of the 7th art alongside Mlies, Chaplin,

Bergman, Kubrick and Cameron.

Damien Chazelle, born in 1985,

brings us his version of cinema history.

With a vast ultra-referential universe,

an erudite story and a dazzling aesthetic,

the impact of the trilogy

was phenomenal.

The Matrix succeeded in bringing together

a generation's taste for comic books,

martial art films and philosophy.

Joel Silver is an iconoclastic producer.

It was the power of the unusual trio he

formed with the two filmmakers

that enabled The Matrix to revitalize

the action genre

and become a pioneer

in intellectual blockbusters.

When Charlie Rose asked him

the question

that was already on everyone's

mind at the time,

Silver explained how well

the Wachowskis had synthesized

the influences that had shaped them.

Why do you think this movie

had such an impact?

A movie that set the direction

for the future?

It's because these two guys who

really are gifted in how they've been able

to put together all of these influences

that over their lives just created

a sense of them that there was

a new way to do things,

there was a new way to tell a story,

a new way to use visual effects

hadn't been done yet.

And that the audience out there was

looking for something more

than just a dumb action movie,

which, I have to say,

I'm responsible

for making a lot of them.

The Matrix fascinates because it calls

out to us, because it resonates with us.

You have to let it go, Neil.

Just like for Neo, experiencing the film

provokes a genuine revelation.

Free your mind.

It encourages us to free our minds,

reinterpret reality,

transform it and even transcend it.

The prefix "trans" is not trivial when it

comes to the first transgender filmmakers.

After all, those not yet called Lana

and Lilly made their transition

after the third Matrix film.

But above all,

"trans" means going beyond,

beyond what is taken for granted,

what is preconceived.

And it is in precisely that kind of spirit

that the Wachowskis grew up in the 70s.

In general, we're children

of the 20th century

and that means that we're drawn

to originality.

Originality was always

the primary draw.

It was always the thing that made

you excited to see something different,

see something that you

hadn't seen before.

And if you think of, like, Star Wars

and Raiders and Alien and Terminator,

and they have the fact that they're

original material written for the movies,

written to be a movie.

We grew up sort of in that culture

where we're attracted to things

that haven't been told before

or seen before.

The Matrix is directly linked

to the 1960s and 70s.

Young people were

emancipating themselves,

breaking away from past shackles,

and counter-cultural movements

were imagining new relationships

with other people and with the world.

I'm Peter Fonda.

We've just finished making a movie

dealing with the most talked

about subject of the day: LSD.

The resulting psychedelia invited us

to rethink reality,

notably through the use of dr*gs

such as LSD and mescaline.

Through hallucination,

dreams and reality could merge.

In the opening moments of The Matrix,

Neo has barely woken up

and already a character is offering

him a trip,

claiming that mescaline

is the only way to get high.

Did you ever have that feeling

of you're not sure

if you're awake or still dreaming?

All the time. It's called mescaline.

It's the only way to fly.

And the next sh*t shows us

a white rabbit tattoo,

like the one Alice uses as a guide

in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.

I'm late!

Lewis Carroll's novel,

adapted by Disney in 1951,

is a benchmark work of psychedelia.

- I simply must get out.

- But you are outside.

- What?

- See for yourself.

That's me. I'm asleep.

It narrates a series of hallucinations,

a waking dream that can ultimately raise

our consciousness and set us free.

Please wake up Alice! Alice, Alice!

The entire Matrix saga quotes

this literary masterpiece,

conceived as a tale of learning,

as Neo literally steps through the looking

glass to discover reality.

How do you know the difference between

the dream world and the real one?

Psychedelia influences science fiction,

and in particular a major work for the

young Wachowskis: 2001: A Space Odyssey.

In addition to its acid trip finale,

Stanley Kubrick's cult film

already foreshadowed the nightmare

scenario of The Matrix,

with its supercomputer that betrays

humans, the notorious HAL.

Hello, Hal, do you read me?

Open the pod bay doors. Hal.

I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid

I can't do that.

Philip K.d*ck, who readily confessed

to writing under the influence of dr*gs,

went even further in a lecture he gave

in 1977 to a stunned audience:

the underlying idea was that

when reality goes off the rails,

it's confirmation that it's just

an illusion.

We are living in a computer

programmed reality

and the only clue we have to it is

when some variable is changed

and some alteration

in our reality occurs.

What is that?

This change of variable,

this glitch in the matrix,

is perfectly illustrated when the same

black cat appears twice in a row to Neo:

Dj vu...

It means the machines have

spotted the rebels.

Dj vu is usually a glitch

in the Matrix.

It happens when they

change something.

If psychedelia reinterprets

reality through dr*gs,

computer technology reinterprets

the world through virtual reality.

And LSD was a crucial element in nurturing

the spirit of Silicon Valley.

At the time, computer art pioneer

John Whitney

was generating visual poems

using computers.

In 1970, he produced a series

of films for IBM and Caltech,

which he entitled MATRIX.

Psychedelia and the computer

revolution are intimately linked.

Essayist and LSD guru Timothy Leary

even saw the PC, the personal computer,

as the religion of the future.

I think that the new confrontation with

God always produces a new form of art.

Now, the new form of art,

the new religious language in the future

is going to be electronic.

When the 80s rolled around,

the cyber world was the source

of all our fantasies and hopes.

The Macintosh advert, for example, takes

its aesthetic from George Orwell's 1984,

again with Ridley Scott at the helm.

Here, the totalitarian prophecy

is reversed,

with the promise that computers

will liberate us, not enslave us.

On January 24, Apple Computer

will introduce Macintosh.

And you'll see why 1984

won't be like 1984.

The utopia of a digital revolution

seemed to have a bright future.

In the same year as the release

of The Matrix, Tim Berners-Lee,

the founder of the Web,

spoke to Charlie Rose

about the fundamentally humanist nature

of the Internet.

According to him, the web as we know it

could never have existed

if it had been conceived

as a private system.

When you ask everybody in the world

who has information

things with these URLs

you're asking them whatever information

it is, please just give it one of these.

That's a lot to ask of itself.

That's what you have to ask for it

to be in a universal space.

You say, if it's important information,

I must be able to link to it.

You can't ask something as general

as that and also put constraints.

You can't say, and oh, by the way,

this is a private system I own.

It just wouldn't have happened.

This space for exchange

and sharing,

free and accessible to all,

makes protest possible.

In 1999, just a few months

before the release of The Matrix,

the Battle of Seattle broke out.

As the 3rd conference of the WTO,

the World Trade Organization,

was taking place,

demonstrators rose up against the

injustices of economic globalization.

Seattle was among

the first mobilizations

internationally coordinated mainly

via the internet

with 400.000 people

taking part online.

The birthplace of grunge, as well

as the giants Microsoft and Amazon,

Seattle saw the emergence

of the first movement

to be so widely shared

via the Internet.

It was the start of alter-globalization,

which dreamt of a responsible

and equitable capitalism.

Fight Club echoed this

with its schizophrenic,

paranoid and hallucinated hero...

You met me at a very strange

time of my life.

...who wanted to eradicate consumerism

and wipe banks off the face of the Earth.

The Wachowskis' cinema

has a political dimension.

It depicts the struggle of minorities

against their oppressors.

That's what racing is about.

It has nothing to do with cars or drivers.

All that matters is power and the

unassailable might of money.

I will not be subjected to such abuse.

Stand out. Stand out.

In 2006, V for Vendetta, directed by

their assistant director James McTeigue,

depicts a popular uprising

against a fascist state.

The film became an emblem

of citizen disobedience,

and gave a new face

to the Anonymous hackers.

Inspired by the spirit of the 70s and

the technological mistrust of the 90s,

the Matrix trilogy was born

in the midst of the digital revolution.

And by encouraging us to be wary of the

established order and to doubt reality,

the trilogy produced a range

of contradictory effects,

which were amplified tenfold

in a world whose future

was becoming increasingly uncertain.

I know you're out there.

I can feel you now.

I know that you're afraid. You're afraid

of us. You're afraid of change.

I don't know the future. I didn't come

here to tell you how this is going to end.

I came here to tell you how

it's going to begin.

And that I'm going to show these people

what you don't want them to see.

I'm going to show them

a world without you.

A world, without rules and controls,

without borders or boundaries.

A world, where anything is possible.

Where we go from there

is a choice I leave to you.

Between the release

of The Matrix I and II,

the new millennium dawned

with a clash of fire and steel.

On September 11, 2001,

jihadist t*rrorists hacked two planes

and flew them into the twin towers

of the World Trade Center,

the symbol of American power.

The worst disaster movie ever

conceived didn't hit the screens,

it happened for real:

reality surpassed fiction.

States like these and their t*rror1st

allies constitute an axis of evil.

Arming to thr*aten the peace of the world

by seeking weapons of mass destruction.

The fight against the notorious

"axis of evil" justified anything,

even outright lies: the weapons of mass

destruction supposedly present in Iraq

were in fact a pretext

to dislodge S*ddam Hussein.

The surgical w*r resembled a virtual one.

It was almost filmed like a video game,

with infrared images

with a greenish hue reminiscent

of the screens of The Matrix.

Between the falsehoods and the truth,

conspiracy theories began to emerge.

Just a few hours after the att*cks,

the first rumors spread across the web.

Thanks to forums,

blogs and social media,

anyone could publish information.

All you needed was an opinion

and an audience:

it was Internet 2.0.

The Matrix trilogy became a cult classic,

a cryptic series perhaps holding answers

to the questions of the time.

And if you looked hard enough, there

were prophetic messages to be found.

As you can see, we've had our eye on you

for some time now, Mr. Anderson.

For example, Neo's passport expires

on September 11, 2001.

We might wonder about the name of the

building in which Morpheus is being held,

it bears the letters MMI,

meaning 2001 in Roman numerals...

Everything became a sign,

and everything could be meaningful.

The mystery was compounded

by the fact that the Wachowskis

didn't comment on their work.

On the set of Charlie Rose,

their absence was striking,

especially given the colossal

success of the films.

The film crew become their spokespeople,

respecting the posture of the directors

and their desire to never dictate

reductive messages to viewers.

Time magazine did a cover story and

they wouldn't talk to Time magazine.

They want people to think for themselves,

too. They don't want to...

Lead them.

Yeah, they want people to have

their own imagination,

because you get so many

different things,

different people get different ideas

about the film.

And I think that's important to them.

That's important to them for people

to really take what they want.

They don't want to have to define

it for people.

They want people to define

it for themselves.

The interpretations went so far

that the revelations of the 2nd and 3rd

episodes were unnoticed.

That's impossible.

The prophecy tells us...

It was a lie, Morpheus.

The One was never meant

to end anything.

It was all another system of control.

And yet we discovered that the One,

the revolt,

and the prophecy was all just

another illusion.

I'm sorry.

A program generated by the Matrix

to maintain human hope and order.

Yet the era took hold of the story.

After everything that has happened,

how can you expect me to believe you?

I don't. I expect just what

I've always expected.

For you to make up your

own damn minds.

All the more so as, at the same time,

real political scandals were unfolding

and getting an unprecedented

reach thanks to the Web.

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange

shared secret US m*llitary documents

revealing w*r crimes.

Then a mysterious whistleblower,

living in exile in Hong Kong,

exposed the existence of a gigantic

American and British surveillance system:

Edward Snowden, whose struggle

is chronicled in Citizenfour.

Like Morpheus, he had seen and lived

inside the System,

in this case, the CIA and the NSA,

and he was trying to wake us up,

to open our eyes to the fact that

the system

was tracking us through our

connected devices.

Isn't that worth fighting for?

What he described to Guardian journalists

in 2013 sounded like a dystopia.

There's an infrastructure in place in

the United States and worldwide

that NSA has built in cooperation

with other governments as well,

that intercepts

every digital communication,

every radio communication.

- It's so opaque...

- It's not science fiction.

The collaborative and fraternal Internet

exists alongside its

nightmarish equivalent.

While the democratization

of information enables

a formidable collective intelligence,

it also creates the opposite phenomenon:

the sanctification of convictions

to the detriment of facts.

Truth becomes mere opinion.

If the Web unifies and placates,

it also fosters division and dissent.

So one of the biggest questions

we're facing

is in a world of a million speakers,

how do you find what's good?

Like Snowden and Assange,

who were forced into exile,

Aaron Swartz was to suffer

a heavy price in 2011.

For having put millions of scientific

articles online free of charge,

this defender of free culture was

prosecuted by the American justice system,

risking 35 years in prison

and a $1 million fine.

Crushed by the pressure,

he committed su1c1de at the age of 26,

a month before his trial.

Berners Lee would pay tribute to the man

who tried to extend the initial,

libertarian spirit of the web.

Aaron is dead. In this crazy world,

we have lost a mentor, a wise elder.

Hackers for right, we have one down.

We've lost one of our own.

And even what seemed so clear

is becoming murky,

like the messages behind

the red pill and the blue pill.

Values are reversing, and it's now the

American far-right that's embracing them.

CNN Journalist Laurie Segall revisited

the famous scene from The Matrix

in which this alternative truth

is said to originate.

The red pill has become a code for

masculinists who believe that men,

rather than women, are discriminated

against in our societies.

What started out as an advice forum

on seduction became radicalized.

To swallow the red pill is to accept

that everything you've been

told about society,

about gender, race, politics

is a lie.

Our world has become a chat room. I think

in many ways we have become our avatars.

We have become offline

the people that we are online.

Thanks to Facebook, Twitter

and the other Silicon Valley behemoths,

people are free to express themselves

and speak their minds.

Everyone is in their own corner, in their

own bubble, in their own matrix...

The apotheosis was the election

of Donald Tr*mp as president in 2016.

Born into the world of business, he became

a reality TV star with The Apprentice.

- Hello, fellas.

- Hello, Mr. Tr*mp.

You're fired.

He became the 45th President of the United

States largely thanks to social media.

With him, the confusion between truth

and lies reached its peak,

turning the concept of fake news

against the mainstream media.

- Don't be rude.

- Can you give us a question?

Don't be rude.

I'm not gonna give you a question.

You are fake news.

The principle is simple: "Fake news

is news I don't agree with".

Tr*mp was so polarising that he managed

to embody everything and its opposite.

To his opponents,

he was a successful Agent Smith:

Mr. Anderson, welcome back.

Like Neo's sworn enemy, a programme

that took control of the Matrix.

But for his fans, he's actually Morpheus,

the one who guides Neo,

promises the end of the system

and galvanises the crowd

at the start of Matrix Reloaded.

Tonight we are not afraid.

And what was bound to happen

eventually did: on January 6th 2021,

completely hooked on red pills,

Tr*mp's supporters staged a coup d'tat.

We're going to walk down to the Capitol

and we're going to cheer on our brave

senators and congressmen and women.

Because you'll never take back our

country with weakness.

You have to show strength

and you have to be strong.

Convinced that Joe Biden had rigged

the presidential election,

they stormed the Capitol.

It was the culmination of 20 years

of anti-system counter-culture

and a distorted

re-reading of The Matrix.

Suddenly, you're filled with doubt:

what if Donald Tr*mp and the far right owe

something to the Wachowskis' films?

What if this rebellious,

progressive trilogy had,

in spite of itself,

given fuel to the alt right?

If it's our time to die, it's our time.

All I ask is if we have to give these

bastards our lives,

we give him hell before we do.

Worse still, don't some of us

prefer lies to the truth?

Like the character Cypher, the traitorous

villain from the first film.

I know this steak doesn't exist.

I know that when I put it in my mouth,

the Matrix is telling my brain that

it is juicy and delicious.

You know what I realize?

Ignorance is bliss.

Just like in the cyberpunk fables,

aren't the big technology groups

not only accomplices,

but the real winners of the chaos?

After all, wasn't Elon Musk, the tycoon

behind Paypal, Tesla, SpaceX and Twitter,

an early supporter of Tr*mp?

The same Elon Musk who extols

the virtues of transhumanism,

meaning the augmentation

of humans through technology,

and who jokes with his mum

on the set of Saturday Night Live.

You turned that video game

about space into reality.

Unless you consider that our reality

might be a video game

and we're all just computer simulations

being played by a teenager

in another planet.

That's great Elon.

Like his ultra-rich colleagues

in Silicon Valley,

he is still planning for the apocalypse,

and fantasising about a luxury bunker.

You never know...

So when Musk and Tr*mp's daughter

argued on Twitter,

using the red pill as an emblem of their

opinions and their heartfelt battle,

it was Lilly who broke her silence on

behalf of the Wachowskis

and reacted with a tweet that had

the virtue of being clear.

This would not be the last word

from the two sisters,

nor their last artistic gesture.

The Matrix was

completely appropriated,

right down to the advertising

for a car brand broadcast

during America's biggest

sporting event, the Super Bowl.

Let me tell you why you're here.

It is the world of luxury that

has been pulled over your eyes

to blind you from the truth.

We just want to get our car...

Take the blue key, you go back

to the luxury you know.

You take the red key and you'll never

look at luxury the same again.

So, Lana directed the final episode

of what became a tetralogy,

continuing her sister's defiance of the

misappropriation of The Matrix values.

It was Matrix: Resurrections,

released in 2021.

Now what? Things have changed.

The market's tough.

I'm sure you can understand why our

beloved parent company, Warner Brothers,

has decided to make a sequel

to the trilogy.

What ?

I know you said the story was over for

you, but that's the thing about stories.

They never really end, do they?

Just like in the real world,

the film takes place twenty years

after the previous instalment.

This time, the Matrix was reprogrammed

in a cooler, more pop,

much less cyberpunk style in order

to control humans even better.

The soundtrack remained psychedelic,

with Jefferson Airplane's 'White Rabbit'.

Resurrected and depressed,

Neo is now a video game programmer

for a subsidiary of Warner Bros.

And the trilogy we know is nothing more

than a series of very popular games

inside the Matrix.

So popular, in fact,

that the parent company wants to force

Neo to produce a fourth episode...

Revolutionize gaming again...

I thought it would be fun to weave

some of myself

and my own experience into

poor Thomas Anderson's experience.

The colourful look of the analyst,

the computer geeks...

I'm a geek!

So where is my machine?

...the sockless

loafers of the new Smith...

Mr. Anderson!

...the diversity of Deus Machina

employees, the marketing hipsters...

- Obviously the Matrix is about...

- Transpolitan...

Crypto fascism.

- It's a metaphor...

- Of capitalist exploitation.

They too are from the Matrix generation.

But they have chosen to be complicit

in the system.

With these multiple mise en abme,

Lana expresses the raw truth:

we're up to our necks in the Matrix!

They took your story,

something that meant so much to people

like me

and turned it into something trivial.

To what the Matrix does,

who weaponizes every idea,

every dream,

everything that's important to us.

But above all, the film is an opportunity

for Lana to reaffirm

what has always been

at the heart of The Matrix,

but also of the Wachowski sisters' entire

filmography: the value of Love.

Love that unites human beings,

whomever they may be,

while at the same time being a w*apon

of emancipation and revolt.

Have we met ?

The rebellious love of Trinity and Neo

in The Matrix can be found

in all of the Wachowskis' films:

in Bound, their first film,

it is the passion of the two heroines,

Violet and Corky,

that enables them to escape

a male-dominated world

and overcome their condition.

I want out.

I want a new life.

I see what I've been waiting for,

but I can't do it alone.

In Speed Racer, the adaptation

of a cult Japanese anime

turned into an experimental film,

Speed and Trixie join forces to fight

the destructive power of money.

You're the ones who are saying

I better drive than most of WRL.

- Now's not the time to prove it.

- Why not?

It's too dangerous.

Too dangerous for me,

but not for you, right?

These same themes are found

in the rebellious couples

of their great choral film Cloud Atlas,

and the many combinations they create.

It's Jupiter and Caine from Jupiter:

The Fate of the Universe fighting

for the survival of humanity.

And it's the 8 characters

in their Netflix series, Sense8,

fraternally connected across space

and time.

What you decide to do, just know

you won't have to do it alone.

Even machines and humans can merge.

Matrix Revolutions,

the third instalment,

leads to a truce, an armistice

between humans and machines.

The directors are not so much suggesting

transhumanism as 'trans' humanism.

Trinity's rescue in Matrix Resurrections

takes this 'trans' philosophy

to its logical conclusion.

- Are you ready?

- Yes.

In an alternating montage, the heroine is

saved by the combined forces of humans,

programmes and machines,

acting in perfect symbiosis.

No!

Stop them!

Transgender as much as transgressive,

the Wachowskis' films

have been imbued

with the 'trans' prefix

since their inception,

and the Matrix tetralogy

is the emblem.

There's a critical eye being cast

back on Lana's in my work

through the lens of our transness.

This is a cool thing because

it's an excellent reminder

that art is never static.

And while the ideas of identity and

transformation are critical components

in our work, the bedrock

that all ideas rest upon is love.

Lana and Lilly never cease to tell

the story of a fluid,

protean love that subverts social codes.

To the point of upending values,

like Trinity's famous kiss to Neo,

reminiscent of the well-known fairy tale.

Do you hear me?

I love you.

But this time it's the princess

who wakes up the sleeping beauty.

Matrix: Resurrections reunites Neo

and Trinity one last time,

the electronic, androgynous heroes

whose mad love had already derailed

the machines in the first episodes.

The two actors, Carrie-Anne Moss

and Keanu Reeves, have aged.

And the way they gaze at each other is

touching in a way that is beyond fiction.

You almost get the feeling

that they're mutating,

that their physical bodies are giving

way to digital versions of themselves.

It's as if, over time, they've brought

a bit of the matrix back with them.

Their half-digital faces take

on a dimension of eternity.

On several occasions, the two heroes

observe a group of birds

flying in close formation.

These swarms, reminiscent of sentinels,

have a particular structure:

the more numerous they are,

the less influence each individual

has on the group

and the less likely they are to disrupt

it with a marginal movement.

Lana, Lilly, Neo and Trinity are inviting

us to shake up mass behaviour,

to take a giant leap into the void

in order to destabilise the Matrix

and rethink our digital world.

It remains to be seen what the next

generations will make of reality.

I was having dinner at a friend's house,

and he had some kids.

They hadn't seen the film The Matrix.

So I start to say, well, there's this guy

who's in a kind of virtual world,

and he finds out that

there's a real world,

and he's really questioning

what's real and not real.

And he really wants

to know what's real.

And the young girl was like, why?

And I was like, what do you mean?

She was like, who cares if it's real?

And I was like, what,

you don't care if it's real?

And she was like, no.
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