Right out of the gate this fresh viewing of The Matrix
is by far the most I’ve ever enjoyed the grand sci-fi extravaganza. The story is really tight with good pacing
and the production design has an awesome David Fincher-y vibe. Gritty, clear, dark, greenish tint inside the
Matrix, blueish tint outside, shimmery to a degree, beautiful. It’s very impressive how the Wachowskis were
able to blend their major influences of 70’s and 80’s kung fu films with dystopian
post-apocalypse, technobabble computer hackery, modern action sensibilities and
intellectual philosophical messaging.
All while pioneering integrated computer effects into outrageous action
scenes. I mean the whole package just
turned out really fuckin’ cool. Congrats
to the world for recognizing the high ambitions this mid budget blockbuster set
and actually accomplished.
The part that interested me least back in the day was all
the metaphor/allegory stuff. I think I
had a hard time reconciling the ridiculous fight scenes with characters
speaking so academically about the world being fake in some way, a construct of
our own imagination or a dream or whatever.
“Hey, shut it and stick to breaking off boots in asses like I’m used to
with my boys Van Damme and Segal.” But
the dichotomy isn’t nearly as glaring as I remember. The conversation the movie wants to have
isn’t completely abstruse like I always thought either. Having machines enslave humans and use them
as batteries fits the nihilistic proposal that’s laid out pretty perfectly.
And the work that was put into the front end of the process
along with hiring superb talent in all areas helps with the longevity of the
picture. I bet you everybody thinks this
is dated as fuck but I was shocked as shit to discover this looks and feels
timeless. If anything you could be
mistaken for assuming the Wachowskis were intentionally going for a retro vibe
with the payphones and pixelated computer displays. But haircuts, clothing, sets, the Matrix
depicted as streaming vertical lines of green code, computer language (which is
kept to a bare minimum) and a lot of the effects hold up. Wow. I
would not have bet money on that.
Curiously the only minus I would give is the thing that was
spoofed and mimicked for years after this came out. The effects shots where the action pauses and
the camera swivels to a new position before the scene continues comes off as
pure show off-ery these days. And I’m
really only talking about two shots here.
The opening where Trinity (Carrie-Ann Moss (Fido)) jumps into the
air to kick a cop and when Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne (Event Horizon))
takes a bullet in the ankle while running to leap onto a rescue chopper. These ninety degree spins are only for the
audience. It’s the filmmakers pointing
out what’s possible with computers instead of the effects enhancing the scene by
showing the characters bending the rules of the Matrix (like the infamously
badass bullet dodging scene). These two
shots boil down to a fancy cut and zoom.
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