The Animatrix is a collection of nine shorts that further expands the world and mythology of the Matrix universe. It was released in 2003 along with Reloaded and Revolutions, takes place at various points in the timeline and involves a few established characters but primarily brand new ones. The Wachowskis produced and wrote some of the films but directed none. This is of note because they retained full control over the three main pictures so to see someone else’s take on the material yields gnarly results.
Before I get into the mini reviews I wanna make a brief
blanket statement on the nine. First of
all the animation is absolutely stunning.
Some have the traditional anime look, some have a more charcoal
sketchbook kinda thing going on, they’re all a little different and amazing to
view. I believe they each have some sort
of CGI augmentation, you know like how Disney started to incorporate into their
animated features particularly with layering and backgrounds in the late 80’s
and 90’s. The voice acting is top
notch. A couple of folks reprised their
roles from the films like Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Ann Moss. The sound design in general is really neat
with plenty to absorb, particularly in Matriculated. So these are expertly executed pieces with a
lot of attention to detail.
(The order of the shorts could be different depending on
where and how you saw them (The Matrix website, as a collection
in theaters, on DVD, etc. Final
Flight of the Osiris was screened with Reloaded and Dreamcatcher
apparently). Anyway, this is the
sequence I caught them)
1. The Second Renaissance Part I and II. These are the two most important of the
bunch. They chronicle the entire
backstory of The Matrix including man’s fraught relationship with
artificial intelligence machines, their falling out, the machines erection of
their own city, the war and the creation of the Matrix itself.
This is a fucking brutally recounted story. The overall tone is depressing as shit with
humans and robots treating each other horribly, hellbent on mercilessly
obliterating one another. And on top of
that it’s graphic with face smashing, limb ripping and even android executions
that’ll make you squirm. I guess that’s
a testament to how effectively the artists brought the story to life.
If you’re super into The Matrix then this is required
reading to get a better understanding of how shit began. Seeing this makes the movies a lot heavier
(that sorta goes for all of these actually).
I mean it’s the same exact backstory as The Terminator but hey,
stealing from the best ain’t so bad.
Also, the machine city, 01 (Zero-One), is located in the
middle east somewhere so technically the entire Matrix trilogy takes
place there.
Such a cool simple idea that fits nicely within the
universe. Sure it’s Cypher’s (Joe Pantoliano
(Risky Business)) plan from the original picture but this is stylized to
the extreme and so awesome looking. The
Japanese aesthetic is gorgeous with the ornate costumes, fancy weapon moves,
high flying action and powerful dramatic tension. It’s seriously badass.
This one’s my favorite short. The Second Renaissance is good
knowledge-wise for filling in everything pre-Matrix but Program
is pure fun.
3. Kid’s Story. A
high school teen realizes something’s not quite right with the world and agents
catch on to him. He races through his
school on skateboard to make a daring escape.
According to the internet this is supposed to be the same
Kid from Reloaded and Revolutions that pesters Neo all the time
about wanting to join the Nebuchadnezzar crew and he eventually jumps into one
of those machine gun wielding robot suits to help save the citizens of
Zion. Yea, I know we really needed his
backstory. It’s just ok.
5. Beyond. Yoko
goes looking for her cat and stumbles across an abandoned building in the
city. Gravity, shadows and time all act
funny. In reality it’s a damaged part of
the Matrix that’s glitching out. I like
this idea, it makes sense. This is in
the same vein as saying déjà vu is really the Matrix making a physical change to
your surroundings. It’s an effort to
explain weird real world stuff. In this
case a broken piece of the Matrix is supposedly what paranormal phenomena is.
7. Matriculated.
A squad of human soldiers lures in a robot hunter to destroy it for the
purpose of rebuilding and reprogramming it.
But when I say reprogramming I mean they try to convince the machine to
turn rogue and fight for the humans.
They achieve this through a complicated process of plugging the robot
into a special rehabilitation program along with five or six humans. They run through several cycles of playfully tormenting
the thing and then showing mercy. That’s
the best way I can describe it. I don’t
really know what the fuck they’re doing or how they think this recalibrates the
coding.
If you do drugs though this is the guy to watch. The second half is one trippy motherfucker
that’s a stream of consciousness situation.
Shapes, rooms, objects and bright ass everchanging colors bleed into
each other like a kaleidoscope on lots of very strong steroids.
While this was cool to see once I don’t know if I could do
it again. It’s not only the overwhelming
zaniness of the ridiculous visuals but the movie also gets really sad towards
the end.
It’s possible you could’ve seen this before Reloaded
which wouldn’t have made any damn sense to you if it was your first time. I think this is a weaker entry largely
because it’s more information that isn’t crucial to understanding the events in
the series. The opening sword fight
training program was done much better in Program and the battle with the
flying tentacle machine creatures is the kind of stuff in the Matrix
films I don’t care for all that much. On
the bright side the CGI animation hasn’t aged too badly.
So I would definitely recommend The Animatrix if
you’re still hankering for more and/or want to take a deeper dive into the
universe. It’s a nice companion piece
that gets a lot of mileage out of a number of what-if scenarios. It wouldn’t have been a satisfying
sequel/prequel mashup if this were released instead of Reloaded and Revolutions
so this addendum packaging of little stories is the perfect sidebar.