THE MATRIX REVOLUTIONS (2003)
Reviewed by Jerry Saravia
RATING: One star
After seeing the dreary "The Matrix Revolutions," I have nothing but sour
feelings for this series. The original "The Matrix" is possibly better
than my
initial pan of the film, though I am not sure it works as a kung-fu
actioner
with sci-fi effects and occasional existential quotes. "Reloaded" is a far
better film, stronger in every department though it too gets mired in
over-the-top action scenes, like an interminable 14-minute freeway chase.
Still, "Reloaded" had moments where the reality factor of sense and smell
in a
virtual reality were put forth, as well as questions about machines versus
man.
"Revolutions" could have put the cap on the trilogy by taking such ideas
further, as promised by "Reloaded." Instead this movie is overlong and
exhaustingly repetitive, coasting on a never-ending mirage of shootouts
and
shoot-them-ups that border on noisy overkill. Call it revolutions of an
underimagined script.
Neo (Keanu Reeves), also known as Mr. Anderson, the hero and savior of
"The
Matrix," was last seen in a coma. He is finally brought out of his coma
and is
trying to figure out how to save the city of Zion. You see, Zion will be
demolished by the expedient spider-like robots with tentacles, known as
the
Sentinels, and thus destroy the world the humans live in. The evil Agent
Smith
(Hugo Weaving), last seen battling Neo with multiple clones of himself, is
hellbent on destroying Zion as well, though his nefarious plans include
nothing
more than living amongst all his clones in a rain-drenched, anonymous city
(what a visionary)! Smith is from the virtual reality world and must get
rid of
Neo, and Neo must save Zion. No X-Box games will be awarded to anyone who
can
guess that these two will battle to the death yet again.
Meanwhile, Jada Pinkett Smith, returning from "Reloaded" as Niobe, is
shown to
commandeer a ship with such class, sweat and authority that she is easily
the
best thing in the entire movie. There are also diminishing returns by
Carrie
Anne-Moss as Trinity, Neo's leather-clad girlfriend, the Obi-Wan-like
Morpheus
(Laurence Fishburne, looking quite bored), and many other characters who
bark
orders and not much else - unless you have seen "Reloaded," you'll have no
idea
who they are. The Merovingian (Lambert Wilson), the Frenchman, returns all
too
briefly along with Monica Belluci as his wife - nice but fleeting.
Most of "Matrix Revolutions" consists of battle scenes galore, guns
ablazing in
slow-motion, ships moving at near-hyperspace speeds and hundreds of
Sentinels
moving with whiplash ferocity across the screen, but what in blazes is all
this
about? What is at stake and whom should we root for? Neo is practically
left
out of the movie until the last third - either it is a blessing or a
disappointment to see Keanu Reeves in a supporting role. The Oracle (Mary
Alice, replacing Gloria Foster who died during production of "Reloaded")
is
nothing more than a philosophical mirage, though philosophy takes a
backseat
more than ever for endless, pointless, cumbersome action scenes. The ideas
of
reality and virtual reality that were starting to develop in "Reloaded"
are
practically nonexistent in this sequel. The only reality is that this
trilogy
really had nothing up its sleeve after all.
For more reviews, check out JERRY AT THE MOVIES at:
http://www.geocities.com/faustus_08520/Jerry_at_the_Movies.html
BIO on the author:
http://www.geocities.com/faustus_08520/index.html
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X-RAMR-ID: 38846
X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 1328180
X-RT-TitleID: 1127201
X-RT-SourceID: 875
X-RT-AuthorID: 1314
X-RT-RatingText: 1/4


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