Spoiler-Friendly MATRIX thread
Posted: Thu Nov 06, 2003 12:15 am
I'm not promising I'll be able to avoid spoilers here so if you haven't seen REVOLUTIONS avoid this post, but come back to it after you've seen the movie.
Here's the thing: Reloaded and Revolutions serve as two very different flavours, with Reloaded being a film about doubt and Revolutions as a film about faith. This seemed obvious to me. Then again, these films have never confused me and I've never met anyone who could explain to me what was so hard to "get." I've been poking around the web and I'm finding nothing but stupidity being written about this movie. Some reviews are good, some are bad, but no one is getting the heart of what these movies are. I guess critical thinking is defunct in America. Seeing our current political state, this shouldn't surprise me.
Faith, in the non-religious sense, is something you either posess or you do not. If you doubt at all, your faith is sacrificed. You can practice faith in any of a number of ways. Love, is a personal sense, is the very real fashion that most of us do it. You have varying levels you give it and choose to receive it. Your parents' love is something that is hard to shake, in both dynamics. Some parents are so awful at their job that it is possible to lose our love for them, but most of us start there with our level of faith in love. As you age, you learn to have faith in love, or you learn to doubt it, by varying degrees. Trinity dies because her faith in her love for Neo allowed her to give anything for which she believed. Neo dies for the same thing. But their goal is accomplished.
The message of these movies is that nothing improves from doubt, and the more doubt you have (Smith), the more you are destroyed. The more faith you have (Neo) the more you open minds to possibilities. When I saw the first movie in 99, I wept like a big ol' baby right there in my seat. Because I understood that this was what they were trying to communicate. And they were taking this message to the public in the only spectacular form people would be willing to hear it.
This May, I saw the movie that functioned on a treatise on doubt leave all who saw it filled with it. We are too quick to question what is possible. Even the strongest of believers (Morpheus), is left doubting what can be at the end of it, so everyone walked away with a terribly sour taste in their mouths. Never mind that the next movie was around the corner. Never mind that the middle act in any drama sets the conflict in motion that the protagonist must overcome. People were set up to believe that nothing good could come from these movies and they bought it. The audience were told exactly what they needed to hear. The makers played the viewers like a violin.
Now here's the third movie. And people still want to bitch about it without even trying to understand it. There is something frighteningly brilliant in these films, and I pray those who see these films get the honest and, I believe, potent message in them: We can do anything in this world as long as we believe we can. The forces that stand in front of you can be conquered if you believe you can put your foot down on the other side of them. Nothing will keep us from our will, so long as we have faith in our own will. The only question is what you wish to do with your will. Is it to something benevolent, or something malevolent? We've seen impossible attrocities leveled at our society because the of the will of singular individuals. Why can't you accomplish something of equally unending beauty? You need only extend your will to it and you can.
You just have to believe you can make the jump. You just have to free your mind.
Here's the thing: Reloaded and Revolutions serve as two very different flavours, with Reloaded being a film about doubt and Revolutions as a film about faith. This seemed obvious to me. Then again, these films have never confused me and I've never met anyone who could explain to me what was so hard to "get." I've been poking around the web and I'm finding nothing but stupidity being written about this movie. Some reviews are good, some are bad, but no one is getting the heart of what these movies are. I guess critical thinking is defunct in America. Seeing our current political state, this shouldn't surprise me.
Faith, in the non-religious sense, is something you either posess or you do not. If you doubt at all, your faith is sacrificed. You can practice faith in any of a number of ways. Love, is a personal sense, is the very real fashion that most of us do it. You have varying levels you give it and choose to receive it. Your parents' love is something that is hard to shake, in both dynamics. Some parents are so awful at their job that it is possible to lose our love for them, but most of us start there with our level of faith in love. As you age, you learn to have faith in love, or you learn to doubt it, by varying degrees. Trinity dies because her faith in her love for Neo allowed her to give anything for which she believed. Neo dies for the same thing. But their goal is accomplished.
The message of these movies is that nothing improves from doubt, and the more doubt you have (Smith), the more you are destroyed. The more faith you have (Neo) the more you open minds to possibilities. When I saw the first movie in 99, I wept like a big ol' baby right there in my seat. Because I understood that this was what they were trying to communicate. And they were taking this message to the public in the only spectacular form people would be willing to hear it.
This May, I saw the movie that functioned on a treatise on doubt leave all who saw it filled with it. We are too quick to question what is possible. Even the strongest of believers (Morpheus), is left doubting what can be at the end of it, so everyone walked away with a terribly sour taste in their mouths. Never mind that the next movie was around the corner. Never mind that the middle act in any drama sets the conflict in motion that the protagonist must overcome. People were set up to believe that nothing good could come from these movies and they bought it. The audience were told exactly what they needed to hear. The makers played the viewers like a violin.
Now here's the third movie. And people still want to bitch about it without even trying to understand it. There is something frighteningly brilliant in these films, and I pray those who see these films get the honest and, I believe, potent message in them: We can do anything in this world as long as we believe we can. The forces that stand in front of you can be conquered if you believe you can put your foot down on the other side of them. Nothing will keep us from our will, so long as we have faith in our own will. The only question is what you wish to do with your will. Is it to something benevolent, or something malevolent? We've seen impossible attrocities leveled at our society because the of the will of singular individuals. Why can't you accomplish something of equally unending beauty? You need only extend your will to it and you can.
You just have to believe you can make the jump. You just have to free your mind.